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Travel itinerary English

Blog / 11/11/2024

English with the meaning of "travel" includes: tour, travel and trip. The difference is:

First, the morphology is different

1、tour

Britain [t (r)] America [tr]

2、travel

English ['trv () l] American ['trvl]

3、trip

Britain [Trp] and America [Trp]

Second, the interpretation is different

1、tour

Definition of nouns: n. travel, travel; performing tour

Verb interpretation: v. Travel, travel in ...; Make a tour of ...

2、travel

Definition of nouns: n. travel; (equipment) for travel

Verb interpretation: v. long-distance travel; Pass through (an area); (informal) able to travel.

3、trip

Definition of noun: travel, especially a short round trip

Verb interpretation: v. stumble; Tripping; To trip over; Cause to fall; Walk (or run, dance) at a brisk pace

Third, the use of words is different.

Tour n. travel, sightseeing

[Discrimination] refers to a sightseeing tour that takes pleasure as the purpose and finally returns to the starting point. On the way, it visits several different places, and the distance can be long or short.

〕He has gone on a tour to Europe.

He has traveled to Europe.

Travel n. travel

Discrimination refers to the act of traveling rather than a specific trip. When used in the plural, it refers to long-term travel or tourism in a distant place, and does not emphasize the direct destination.

[example] this job involves a fair amount of travel.

This job requires frequent business trips.

Trip n. travel

[Discrimination] Common words often refer to short-distance round-trip or infrequent trips, emphasizing the destination or the reason for the trip.

[example] the manager has gone on a business trip.

The manager has gone on a business trip.

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-distance "trip" from one place to another, usually on land, and sometimes it can also mean a long or short "journey" that you often walk. Used only as nouns. For example:

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

2. voyage mainly refers to long-distance water travel, and it can also refer to air travel, which means "navigation, aviation and navigation". Used only as nouns. For example:

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

3. trip generally refers to "travel and hiking" with short time and short distance, and can also refer to long-distance travel. It can replace journey in informal language. Used only as nouns. For example:

We made a boat trip to the island last week and had a good time. Last week, we went to the island by boat and had a good time.

4. tour mainly refers to the twists and turns of the travel route, which often means "visiting, visiting, (touring) traveling, inspecting, shopping and performing". Can be used as verbs and nouns. For example:

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

5. travel means "travel, travel", which generally means the general concept of traveling from one place to another. Often refers to a long, long-distance "trip". Especially a trip to a country. Can be used as verbs and nouns. Its plural form means "travel notes" and "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 data:

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

Trip can also mean "tripping without seeing obstacles", often used with over. Extension can be interpreted as "slip", "slip of the tongue" and "make a mistake", which can mean that someone induces someone to make a mistake, or that someone makes a mistake due to 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 followed as the object.

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

Both make atrip and take atrip mean travel. In American English, the former means "a trip with a specific purpose", while the latter means "a trip".

Pleasuretrip means "a trip for pleasure", which is opposite to businesstrip.

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