Can away function like a verb (not a phrasal verb) [closed]

Solution 1:

This isn't standard English usage. As commented by Leatherwing, it's probably a typo and should have been "runs away".

There is a moderately popular meme where writers will deliberately omit the verb as a joke, usually in conjunction with "I accidentally":

I accidentally a whole pizza

I accidentally 93 MB of files

A large group of people accidentally the US Capitol Building

etc. etc.

In some of these cases, readers are expected to guess the missing verb from context. In other cases, the missing verb is ambiguous and that ambiguity is part of the joke. Either way, it's not 'correct' English grammar and would not be used in formal writing, but you may see it online occasionally.

As noted by tchrist in a comment, old-fashioned English sometimes uses "away" in the same pattern, with the verb "go" left to the reader's imagination, as in this example from Tolkien's "The Hobbit":

Far over the misty mountains cold / To dungeons deep and caverns old / We must away, ere break of day / To seek our pale enchanted gold.

You can also hear it in folk music: "I must away now". But you wouldn't encounter it in normal 21st-century English. Even back in 1937 when "The Hobbit" was published, I suspect it was deliberately chosen to sound old-fashioned. It's very unlikely that the definition shown in your question was aiming for this old usage.