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travel
[trav-uhl]
verb (used without object)
to go from one place to another, as by car, train, plane, or ship; take a trip; journey.
to travel for pleasure.
to move or go from one place or point to another.
to proceed or advance in any way.
to go from place to place as a representative of a business firm.
to associate or consort.
He travels in a wealthy crowd.
Informal., to move with speed.
to pass, or be transmitted, as light or sound.
Basketball., (of a player in possession of the ball) to take more than two steps without dribbling or passing the ball.
to move in a fixed course, as a piece of mechanism.
verb (used with object)
to travel, journey, or pass through or over, as a country or road.
to journey or traverse (a specified distance).
We traveled a hundred miles.
to cause to journey; ship.
to travel logs downriver.
noun
the act of traveling; journeying, especially to distant places.
to travel to other planets.
travels,
to set out on one's travels.
journeys as the subject of a written account or literary work.
a book of travels.
such an account or work.
the coming and going of persons or conveyances along a way of passage; traffic.
an increase in travel on state roads.
Basketball., an instance of traveling with the ball.
Machinery.
the complete movement of a moving part, especially a reciprocating part, in one direction, or the distance traversed; stroke.
length of stroke.
movement or passage in general.
to reduce the travel of food from kitchen to table.
adjective
used or designed for use while traveling.
a travel alarm clock.
travel
/ ˈtrævəl /
verb
to go, move, or journey from one place to another
he travels to improve his mind
she travelled across France
(tr) to go, move, or journey through or across (an area, region, etc)
he travelled the country
to go, move, or cover a specified or unspecified distance
to go from place to place as a salesman
to travel in textiles
(esp of perishable goods) to withstand a journey
(of light, sound, etc) to be transmitted or move
the sound travelled for miles
to progress or advance
basketball to take an excessive number of steps while holding the ball
(of part of a mechanism) to move in a fixed predetermined path
informal, to move rapidly
that car certainly travels
informal, (often foll by with) to be in the company (of); associate
noun
the act of travelling
( as modifier )
a travel brochure
(usually plural) a tour or journey
the distance moved by a mechanical part, such as the stroke of a piston
movement or passage
Spelling Note
Other Word Forms
- travelable adjective
- nontraveling adjective
- nontravelling adjective
- outtravel verb (used with object)
- pretravel noun
- untraveling adjective
- untravelling adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of travel1
Word History and Origins
Origin of travel1
Example Sentences
The previous 50-over World Cup took place in New Zealand in 2022, before Bell had debuted internationally, but she was taken as a travelling reserve having started the winter in Australia with England A.
The IDF's Arabic spokesman announced on Wednesday that people in the south would no longer be able to use the al-Rashid coastal road to travel north to Gaza City.
She was a travel ball player for years in softball.
The impasse affects the of funding government operations through October and beyond and is poised to cause widespread disruption for Americans in areas ranging from air travel to zoo visits.
For a history buff, the region is fascinating - Burgess says just travelling around there are "monuments that you constantly drive past which remind you of the First and Second World Wars".
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