Traffic vs Junction - What's the difference?
traffic | junction |
Pedestrians or vehicles on roads, or the flux or passage thereof.
Commercial transportation or exchange of goods, or the movement of passengers or people.
* 1719 , :
* 2007 , John Darwin, After Tamerlane , Penguin 2008, p. 12:
Illegal trade or exchange of goods, often drugs.
Exchange or flux of information, messages or data, as in a computer or telephone network.
Commodities of the market.
* John Gay
To pass goods and commodities from one person to another for an equivalent in goods or money; to buy or sell goods; to barter; to trade.
To trade meanly or mercenarily; to bargain.
To exchange in traffic; to effect by a bargain or for a consideration.
The act of joining, or the state of being joined.
A place where two things meet, especially where two roads meet.
The boundary between two physically different materials, especially between conductors, semiconductors, or metals.
(nautical) The place where a distributary departs from the main stream.
(radio, television) A point in time between two unrelated consecutive broadcasts.
* 2007 , Gary Hudson, ?Sarah Rowlands, The Broadcast Journalism Handbook (page 336)
* 2010 , Peter Stewart, Essential Radio Skills: How to Present a Radio Show
(computing, Microsoft Windows) A kind of symbolic link to a directory.
As nouns the difference between traffic and junction
is that traffic is pedestrians or vehicles on roads, or the flux or passage thereof while junction is the act of joining, or the state of being joined.As a verb traffic
is to pass goods and commodities from one person to another for an equivalent in goods or money; to buy or sell goods; to barter; to trade.traffic
English
(wikipedia traffic)Alternative forms
* traffickNoun
(-)- Traffic is slow at rush hour.
- I had three large axes, and abundance of hatchets (for we carried the hatchets for traffic with the Indians).
- It's units of study are regions or oceans, long-distance trades [...], the traffic of cults and beliefs between cultures and continents.
- You'll see a draggled damsel / From Billingsgate her fishy traffic bear.
Derived terms
* traffic boy * traffic jamVerb
(traffick)References
*junction
English
(wikipedia junction)Noun
(en noun)- Even rolling news has junctions to meet - headlines on the hour or half-hour, or links to live events, for example.
- Try to avoid becoming too predictable or repetitive, particularly at regular junctions .