Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Words for travel

Words for travel

There are journey, voyage, trip, tour and travel.

This group of words all have the meaning of "travel", but the meanings of each word are different.

1. Journey refers to a long or short "distance" from one place to another, usually a long-distance "travel" on land. Only as a noun. For example:

I took a journey from Beijing to Shanghai last year. Last year I took a journey from Beijing to Shanghai.

2. Voyage mainly refers to long-distance water travel, but it can also refer to air travel, meaning "navigation, aviation, sailing", etc. Only as a noun. For example:

She usually gets seasick during the voyage. She often gets seasick during the voyage.

3. Trip generally refers to "travel or hiking" that is short in time and short in distance. It can also refer to long-distance travel. It can be used instead of journey in informal language. Only as a noun. For example:

We made a boat trip to the island last week and had a good time. We made a boat trip to the island last week and had a good time.

4. Tour mainly refers to the tortuous travel route, often meaning "(traveling around) visiting, visiting, (touring) tourism, inspection, shopping, performance" and other meanings. Can be used as verb and noun. For example:

I will tour the world in the future. I will tour the world in the future.

5. Travel means "travel, travel", generally expressing the general concept of traveling from one place to another. Often refers to long-term, long-distance "travel". Especially traveling abroad. Can be used as verb and noun. Its plural form means "travel notes" or "travel notes". For example:

At present, many people are fond of travel in their spare time. At present, many people like to travel in their spare time.

Extended information:

The basic meaning of trip as a verb is "walk, run", which means brisk footsteps. It is an intransitive verb and is often used with prepositions and adverbs.

Tripping can also mean "tripping without seeing an obstacle" and is often used in conjunction with over. By extension, it can be interpreted as "slip," "gaffe," or "make a mistake." It can refer to someone inducing someone to make a mistake, or it can also refer to someone making a mistake due to their own reasons. It can be used as an intransitive verb, or as an intransitive verb. transitive verb. When used as a transitive verb, it takes a noun or pronoun as the object.

When trip is used as a noun, it refers to a short-distance trip in the UK, while in the United States it refers to a long-distance trip. For example, a trip to the moon (a trip to the moon) is the usage in American English.

Both make a?trip and take a?trip mean traveling. In American English, the former refers to "a journey with a specific purpose", while the latter refers to "travel".

Pleasure?trip? refers to "a trip for the purpose of fun", which is the opposite meaning of business?trip.