travel

/ˈtɹævəl/

travel

English Verb Top 1,548
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 1.0s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 0.7s
American (Ryan) (medium)
Male 0.4s
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Definition

To be on a journey, often for pleasure or business and with luggage; to go from one place to another.

Etymology

PIE word *tréyes From Middle English travelen (“to make a laborious journey, travel”) from Middle Scots travailen (“to toil, work, travel”), alteration of Middle English travaillen (“to toil, work”), from Old French travailler (“to trouble, suffer, be worn out”). See the doublets travail and travois. Compare typologically routine << Latin rupta via. Note the inverse semantic vectors: travel moves from a subjective state (toil) to an objective action (journey), while routine moves from an objective object (beaten path) to a subjective pattern (habit). Largely displaced native fare, from Old English faran (“to go [a long distance], to travel”). More at fare.

Example Sentences

  • "John seems to spend as much time travelling as he does in the office."
  • "He that feareth oblatration must not travel."
  • "Then, when Moses had fulfilled the term, and was travelling with his housefolk, he saw in the distance a fire and said unto his housefolk: Bide ye (here). Lo! I see in the distance a fire; peradventure I shall bring you tidings thence, or a brand from the fire that ye may warm yourselves."
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