From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishperambulationper‧am‧bu‧lation /pəˌræmbjəˈleɪʃən/ noun [countable] old-fashioned WALKa walk around a place, especially a slow walk for pleasure —perambulate /pəˈræmbjɑəleɪt/ verb [intransitive, transitive]
Examples from the Corpus
perambulation• On the following day the jury signed a verdict that the 1277 perambulation still set forth the true bounds.• On 20 July another perambulation of the Huntingdonshire Forest was ordered to be made.• There was a window at each of the compass points, and, binoculars in hand, he made his slow perambulation.• The boundaries laid down followed fairly closely those of the perambulation of 1300.