Matching Words
369 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Travels
- noun - a movement through space that changes the location of something
- change location; move, travel, or proceed, also metaphorically; "How fast does your new car go?"; "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"
- make a trip for pleasure
- self-propelled movement
- the act of going from one place to another; "he enjoyed selling but he hated the travel"
- travel from place to place, as for the purpose of finding work, preaching, or acting as a judge
- travel upon or across; "travel the oceans"
- undergo transportation as in a vehicle; "We travelled North on Rte. 508"
- undertake a journey or trip
Travers
- - Across; athwart.
- Horse movement in dressage also known as haunches-in.
Travois
- - A primitive vehicle, common among the North American Indians, usually two trailing poles serving as shafts and bearing a platform or net for a load.
Trevino
- noun - United States golfer (born in 1939)
Treviso
- unknown - Treviso is a city and comune in Veneto, northern Italy. It is the capital of the province of Treviso.
Trivets
- noun - a stand with short feet used under a hot dish on a table
- a three-legged metal stand for supporting a cooking vessel in a hearth
Trivial
- adjective - (informal) small and of little importance; "a fiddling sum of money"; "a footling gesture"; "our worries are lilliputian compared with those of countries that are at war"; "a little (or small) matter"; "a dispute over niggling details"; "limited to petty enterprises"; "piffling efforts"; "giving a police officer a free meal may be against the law, but it seems to be a picayune infraction"
- concerned with trivialities; "a trivial young woman"; "a trivial mind"
- of little substance or significance; "a few superficial editorial changes"; "only trivial objections"
Trivium
- noun - (Middle Ages) an introductory curriculum at a medieval university involving grammar and logic and rhetoric; considered to be a triple way to eloquence