Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Take a trip.

Take a trip.

"To travel" means "to travel" in English.

I think the most important word in the above English sentence is trip. Let me show you other details of the trip, hoping to help you:

First, the phonetic symbols of words

Word pronunciation: English? 【tr? p]? ? ? Beautiful? 【tr? p]?

Second, the definition of words

Noun (short for noun)? Travel; Fall; Mistakes; A brisk pace

Transitive verbs? Lead to a decline; Lead to failure; Make mistakes; Anchor; Vertical sail

An intransitive verb? Trip; Travel; Walk briskly; Mistakes; A stutterer

Third, the usage of words.

(noun)

The basic meaning of trip is "walking and driving", and the extension can be interpreted as "traveling". Often refers to a short trip and return to the original place after the trip. It can be used as a countable or uncountable noun.

(verb)

Trip, as a verb, basically means "go, run", which means intransitive verb. It is often used with prepositions and adverbs.

Trip can also mean "trip without seeing obstacles" and is often used with over. Extension can be interpreted as "slip of the tongue", "slip of the tongue" and "making a mistake". It can mean that someone induces someone to make a mistake, or it can mean that someone makes a mistake for his own reasons. It can be used as an intransitive verb or a transitive verb. When used as a transitive verb, a noun or pronoun is the object.

When trip is used as a noun, it refers to a short trip in Britain and a long trip in America. For example, traveling to the moon is the usage of American English.

Taking a trip and taking a trip both mean traveling. In American English, the former means "travel with a specific purpose" and the latter means "travel";

Pleasant travel means "traveling for pleasure", as opposed to business travel;

Comparison of Travel, Journey and Itinerary: Travel refers to "tourism in a general sense", journey refers to "a trip", and itinerary refers to "a round trip, which often indicates the reason for traveling".

Fourth, phrase collocation.

Arrange a trip? Arrange (go) a trip

Cancel the trip? Cancel the trip

Enjoy the trip? Enjoy the fun of traveling.

End a trip? conclude a trip

Traveling? travel

Traveling? go on a journey

Organize a trip? organize a tour

Planning a trip? plan a tour

Shorten the trip? Shorten the journey

Stop traveling? Stop traveling

Travel? go on a journey

Discrimination of the meaning of verb (abbreviation of verb)

The nouns journey, tour, travel, trip, voyage, excuse, expedition and cruise all mean "travel".

The most common word "journey" mainly refers to a very long one-way land trip, and also refers to a trip on water or in the air.

Tourism refers to the last trip back to the place of departure, with a stopover, long or short, with different purposes.

Travel generally refers to the act of traveling, not specific travel. It refers to a long trip to a distant place, and does not emphasize the direct destination. Both singular and plural.

Trip is a common word, commonly used in spoken language, and often refers to a relatively short trip for business or pleasure.

Voyage refers to traveling on water, especially at sea, and can also refer to air travel.

Excursion is a more formal term, which often refers to a short-term leisure trip of no more than one day, or a hiking trip to and from a specific scenic spot by train or ship.

Exploration refers to an investigation or exploration with a specific purpose.

Cruise mainly refers to cruise by boat, stopping at many places.

Bilingual examples of intransitive verbs

Take? Out? Accident? Insurance? Before? What about you? Going? Open? Yours Travel. ?

Get accident insurance before going on a trip.

It? Used to be. That? Kind? Yes? Travel? Most? Yes? We? Only? Dream? About. ?

This is a trip that most of us can only dream of.

Another one? Travel? Abroad? This? Year? Is it? Out? Yes? That? problem ?

It is impossible to go abroad again this year.

Answer? Less? Rough? Vehicle? Will it? Never? Really? Made it? That? Travel. ?

If it weren't for this sturdy car, we wouldn't have finished the trip at all.

You have. Won? Yourself? Answer? Travel? Where to? New? York. ?

You won the trip to new york.

we? Had it? Where to? Manufacturing? How many? Travel? Where to? Bring it? All of them? That? Equipment? Over. ?

We ran back and forth several times before we shipped all the equipment here.