0 past simple and past participle of stalk
1 to follow an animal or person as closely as possible without being seen or heard, usually in order to catch or kill them:
This body form, particularly the dorso-ventrally flattened head and mobile stalked eyes, seems to be consistent with an ambush predation strategy.
Such deficits could lead to difficulties in performing the motor sequencing presumably involved in the production of the final consonant clusters found in many inflected forms (looked, stalked, kept, crept).
Chords that had previously stalked his compositional landscape in packs, their raison d'être dependent upon familial relationships, now roamed as independent sonorities freed from collective responsibility.
Unbowed, he stalked his elusive prey under new political regimes.
There are other aspects of law which can be used for people who feel that they are being stalked.
Impotence, starvation, subjugation stalked across the mental screen.
The offence can apply to anybody, although it is undoubtedly true that it applies mainly to women being stalked by men.
Clause 3 provides for prohibitory orders to be granted by magistrates on the application of somebody who is being stalked.