Telling a person that they can talk the talk but not walk the walk can have a few different meanings, but they all come back to the same principle: actions speak louder than words. This question stems from the challenge "if you talk the talk, you've got to walk the walk." An example would be a person talking of principles. You can talk all you want about principles, but you have to actually live by them, too. If you tell a person they can talk the talk but not walk the walk, it can mean the person is a hypocrite, thus not practicing what they preach. But it can also mean they are procrastinating. They're talking about doing things but not actually doing them. They're all talk, no action.
The phrase "walk the walk and talk the talk" basically means to practice what you preach. It means that if you say something thing you should be able to back it up with actions. For example if someone says they are really good at playing basketball (talk the talk) then they better be able to prove it (walk the walk).
depense what type of IN you mean... if u mean in there house u say can we talk and walk in and then think of something to talk about that is important...
More or less practicing or acting what one believes, as opposed to lip service or Talking the Talk.
No, walk and rock do not rhyme. Walk rhymes with talk, while rock rhymes with sock.
just walk the talk.
You walk up to him, talk for a while maybe if your comfortable with that, then just ask.
tell your friend to come walk with you and then while your or talk just tell her that you kiss her brother and it didnt mean thing it just happen and it would ever do it again
you should just walk away from her or talk to her
Breathe by Rowan!
"If you're going to talk the talk, you had better walk the walk." In a nutshell, what you say is what you should do. If you are going to speak certain thing, promise certain things, give your word; your actions should bear out your words.
someone who can talk the talk but cant walk the walk