Search results
To walk from one place to another
- to walk from one place to another, often feeling tired or bored: I spent the day traipsing around the shops, but found nothing suitable for her. More than 6 million people traipse through the national park each year.
dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/traipse
People also ask
What does traipse mean?
Where did the word traipse come from?
What does traipsing mean?
What does trespass mean?
TRAIPSE definition: 1. to walk from one place to another, often feeling tired or bored: 2. to walk from one place to…. Learn more.
- English (US)
TRAIPSE meaning: 1. to walk from one place to another, often...
- Znaczenie Traipse, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
traipse definicja: 1. to walk from one place to another,...
- Traipse: Japanese Translation
traipse translate: とぼとぼ歩く, ぶらぶら歩く. Learn more in the...
- Traipse: Korean Translation
traipse translate: 터벅터벅 걷다. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Traipse: Catalan Translation
traipse translate: voltar. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Traipse: Arabic Translation
traipse translate: يَتسَكّع. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Traipse: Italian Translation
traipse translate: trascinarsi, arrancare. Learn more in the...
- Traipse: Portuguese Translation
traipse translate: perambular. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- English (US)
The meaning of TRAIPSE is to go on foot : walk; also : to walk or travel about without apparent plan but with or without a purpose. How to use traipse in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Traipse.
1. to walk or go aimlessly or idly or without finding or reaching one's goal. v.t. 2. to walk over; tramp: to traipse the fields. n. 3. a tiring walk. [1585–95; earlier trapse, unexplained alter. of trape, akin to tramp] Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc.
TRAIPSE meaning: 1. to walk from one place to another, often feeling tired or bored: 2. to walk from one place to…. Learn more.
To traipse is to walk around with a sloppy or aimless attitude. A bored high school student might traipse through a museum on a class trip, for example. When you traipse, you trudge in an exhausted or reluctant way.
If you traipse somewhere, you go there unwillingly, often because you are tired or unhappy.
Definition of traipse verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.