verb (used without object),trav·eled,trav·el·ing or (especially British) trav·elled,trav·el·ling.
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),trav·eled,trav·el·ing or (especially British) trav·elled,trav·el·ling.
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,
journeys; wanderings: 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.
Origin of travel
Middle English (Northern and Scots), originally the same word as travail (by semantic change from “to toil, labor,” then “to make a laborious journey,” then “to journey,” a change that did not occur in French and other Romance languages). The spelling travel is due to a shift in accent in the 14th century; verb senses were first recorded in 1250–1300; noun senses were first recorded in 1400–50
usage note for travel
The word travel has come to exemplify a common spelling quandary: to double or not to double the final consonant of a verb before adding the ending that forms the past tense ( –ed ) or the ending that forms the present-participle ( –ing. ) We see it done both ways—sometimes with the same word ( travel, traveled, traveling;travel, travelled, travelling ). As readers, we accept these variations without even thinking about them. But as writers, we need to know just when we should double that final consonant and when we should not. Because American practice differs slightly from British practice, there is no one answer. But there are well-established conventions. In American writing, when you have a one-syllable verb that ends with a single vowel followed by a single consonant, and you want to add a regular inflectional ending that begins with a vowel, you double that final consonant before adding -ed or -ing : stop, stopped, stopping;flag, flagged, flagging. This principle also holds for verbs of more than one syllable if the final syllable is stressed: permit, permitted, permitting;refer, referred, referring. If that syllable is not stressed, there is no doubling of the final consonant: gallop, galloped, galloping;travel, traveled, traveling. British spelling conventions are similar. They deviate from American practices only when the verb ends with a single vowel followed by an l . In that case, no matter the stress pattern, the final l gets doubled. Thus British writing has repel, repelled, repelling (as would American writing, since the final syllable is stressed). But it also has travel, travelled, travelling and cancel, cancelled, cancelling, since in the context of British writing the verb’s final l, not its stress pattern, is the determining factor. Verbs ending in other consonants have the same doubling patterns that they would have in American writing. An outlier on both sides of the Atlantic is the small group of verbs ending in -ic and one lonely -ac verb. They require an added k before inflectional endings in order to retain the appropriate “hard” sound of the letter c : panic, panicked, panicking;frolic, frolicked, frolicking;shellac, shellacked, shellacking. Canadians, of course, are free to use either British or American spellings.
OTHER WORDS FROM travel
trav·el·a·ble,adjectivenon·trav·el·ing,adjectivenon·trav·el·ling,adjectiveouttravel,verb (used with object),out·trav·eled,out·trav·el·ing or (especially British) out·trav·elled,out·trav·el·ling.
pre·trav·el,noun,verb,pre·trav·eled,pre·trav·el·ing or (especially British) pre·trav·elled,pre·trav·el·ling.un·trav·el·ing,adjectiveun·trav·el·ling,adjective
Biden traveled to the state days later, meeting with the Blake family and calling for unity and healing in the community, though he, too, denounced the violence that followed the shooting.
Post-ABC Wisconsin poll shows Biden holding narrow edge over Trump|Dan Balz, Emily Guskin|September 16, 2020|Washington Post
TripActions says it has added nearly 500 new corporate customers since March, a surprising achievement at a time when most employees are still not traveling freely.
Are you ready to start traveling for work again? TripActions’ CEO is banking on it|Michal Lev-Ram, writer|September 15, 2020|Fortune
The Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic, which was first identified in China in December, has had sweeping effects in the public health, business, and travel sectors, among others.
How the coronavirus outbreak is roiling the film and entertainment industries|Alissa Wilkinson|September 11, 2020|Vox
You just travel light with carry-on luggage, go to cities that you love, and get to hang out with all your friends.
Coffee Talk with Fred Armisen: On ‘Portlandia,’ Meeting Obama, and Taylor Swift’s Greatness|Marlow Stern|January 7, 2015|DAILY BEAST
He did travel to China and Australia while the story was unfolding.
Why Mexicans Are Enraged by Obama’s Big Tuesday Meeting|Ruben Navarrette Jr.|January 6, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Travel Noire fellows earned about a half million travel miles in 2014.
‘We Out Here’: Inside the New Black Travel Movement|Charlise Ferguson|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Her travel clique has been known to arrive at an airport, bags packed, passport-in-hand, within hours of spotting a deal.
‘We Out Here’: Inside the New Black Travel Movement|Charlise Ferguson|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
And they all travel affordably, busting the myth that travel is only for the elite.
‘We Out Here’: Inside the New Black Travel Movement|Charlise Ferguson|January 4, 2015|DAILY BEAST
The boys will have a good ten miles further to travel if they go by way of the road.
The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country|Janet Aldridge
It is a record of adventure, travel, and description, so wonderful that for years it was doubted and its accuracy disbelieved.
A History of the Philippines|David P. Barrows
He would be weak and tired, but he would still be able to travel and find food.
Forest Neighbors|William Davenport Hulbert
The deep and extensive hollows formed by the floods of this river compelled us to travel southward for several miles.
Three Expeditions into the Interior of Eastern Australia, Vol 1 (of 2)|Thomas Mitchell
After the long day of travel in Justins company, the color had begun to return faintly to Dosias lips and cheeks.