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		Ask for help > "A walking shadow" or "Shadow which walks"?     
			
		 "A walking shadow" or "Shadow which walks"? 
		
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 LinguaPirot
 
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							| "A walking shadow" or "Shadow which walks"? 
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							| Hello! Which would be a more appropriate and more English to describe this photo? "A walking shadow" or "Shadow which walks"? I am all for the first one and would rather say "a shadow who walks", as the "Shadow which walks" sounds wrong... Thanks in advance!     |  28 Jan 2017      
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| I would say a shadow of a man walking because the shadow is not walking, the man is. (in my opinion) 
 Edit: @ LinguaPirot Awesome analysis! (below) Thanks for sharing! |  28 Jan 2017     
					
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 LinguaPirot
 
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							| redcamarocruiser Thank you for your answer! Yes, this is definitely an opinion based question... I prefer the "walking shadow" as it relates to Shakespeare �s Macbeth, and is a good short, effective and "poetic" enough for a title :)
 |  29 Jan 2017     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| A walking shadow. English prefers this form.  In French, I would say,  �Une ombre qui marche, � just in case that is of interest to anybody.    |  29 Jan 2017     
					
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 LinguaPirot
 
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							| Thank you,cunliffe. Yes, that �s what I believe too. I have asked elsewhere, and got a comparative analysis from the English literature corpus, where this phrase is far more frequent: Google Books-Ngram Viewer |  29 Jan 2017     
					
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