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Travel   /trˈævəl/   Listen
Travel

verb
(past & past part. traveled or travelled; pres. part. traveling or travelling)
1.
Change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically.  Synonyms: go, locomote, move.  "We travelled from Rome to Naples by bus" , "The policemen went from door to door looking for the suspect" , "The soldiers moved towards the city in an attempt to take it before night fell" , "News travelled fast"
2.
Undertake a journey or trip.  Synonym: journey.
3.
Make a trip for pleasure.  Synonyms: jaunt, trip.
4.
Travel upon or across.  Synonym: journey.
5.
Undergo transportation as in a vehicle.
6.
Travel from place to place, as for the purpose of finding work, preaching, or acting as a judge.  Synonym: move around.
noun
1.
The act of going from one place to another.  Synonyms: traveling, travelling.
2.
A movement through space that changes the location of something.  Synonym: change of location.
3.
Self-propelled movement.  Synonym: locomotion.



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"Travel" Quotes from Famous Books



... the second class in America, and I noticed that many very respectably dressed ladies and gentlemen were in them—probably for short distances. It is quite common, both in England and France, in the summer, for people of wealth to travel by rail for a short distance by the ...
— Paris: With Pen and Pencil - Its People and Literature, Its Life and Business • David W. Bartlett

... when the vehicle stopped to let her alight; as she reflected that barely three years ago she considered an omnibus rather a luxury, and that it was a matter of careful calculation how many pennies might be saved by walking to certain points whence one could travel at a reduced fare. How easily are luxurious and self-indulgent habits formed! Well, she had done with them forever now; nor would anything seem a hardship were she but permitted to repair in some measure the evil she ...
— A Crooked Path - A Novel • Mrs. Alexander

... by law— I called no judges but those named by law— As Sovereign, I appealed unto my subjects, The very subjects who had made me Sovereign, And gave me thus a double right to be so. The rights of place and choice, of birth and service, Honours and years, these scars, these hoary hairs, The travel—toil—the perils—the fatigues— 120 The blood and sweat of almost eighty years, Were weighed i' the balance, 'gainst the foulest stain, The grossest insult, most contemptuous crime Of a rank, rash patrician—and found wanting! And this is ...
— The Works of Lord Byron, Volume 4 • Lord Byron

... one side and revealed a little girl who was gazing out at the tracks. "I've had such a time with that brat and I'll never travel with another again. I've just got time to catch my train for St. Paul. Good-bye!" Whereupon, disregarding Ella's cries and her protestations, the woman rushed madly to the other end of the depot and disappeared through a gate which closed behind ...
— Golden Stories - A Selection of the Best Fiction by the Foremost Writers • Various

... up. The confounded shell that had played the fool with my legs had also done something silly to my heart. Hence these collapses after physical and emotional strain. I had to stay in bed for some days. Cliffe told me that as soon as I was fit to travel I must go to Bournemouth, where it would be warm. I told Cliffe to go to a place where it would be warmer. As neither of us would obey the other, we remained ...
— The Red Planet • William J. Locke


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