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Travel vs Peregrinate - What's the difference?

travel | peregrinate |

In intransitive terms the difference between travel and peregrinate

is that travel is to pass from here to there; to move or transmit; to go from one place to another while peregrinate is to travel from place to place, or from one country to another, especially on foot; hence, to sojourn in foreign countries.

In transitive terms the difference between travel and peregrinate

is that travel is to force to journey while peregrinate is to travel through a specific place.

As a noun travel

is the act of traveling.

As an adjective peregrinate is

peregrine; having traveled; foreign, exotic.

travel

English

Alternative forms

* travell

Verb

  • To be on a journey, often for pleasure or business and with luggage; to go from one place to another.
  • I like to travel .
  • To pass from here to there; to move or transmit; to go from one place to another.
  • Soundwaves can travel through water.
  • (basketball) To move illegally by walking or running without dribbling the ball.
  • To travel throughout (a place).
  • I’ve travelled the world.
  • To force to journey.
  • * Spenser
  • They shall not be travelled forth of their own franchises.
  • (obsolete) To labour; to travail.
  • (Hooker)

    Synonyms

    * fare, journey

    Derived terms

    * (l), (l)

    Noun

  • The act of traveling.
  • space travel
    travel to Spain
  • (p) A series of journeys.
  • (p) An account of one's travels.
  • I’m off on my travels around France again.
  • The activity or traffic along a route or through a given point.
  • The working motion of a piece of machinery; the length of a mechanical stroke.
  • There was a lot of travel in the handle, because the tool was out of adjustment.
    My drill press has a travel of only 1.5 inches.
  • (obsolete) Labour; parturition; travail.
  • Synonyms

    * (act of travelling) journey, passage, tour, trip * (activity or traffic along a route or through a given point) traffic * (working motion of a piece of machinery) stroke, movement, progression

    Derived terms

    * travel bug * active travel

    References

    * *

    peregrinate

    English

    Etymology 1

    (etyl) . See also peregrine and pilgrim.

    Verb

  • To travel from place to place, or from one country to another, especially on foot; hence, to sojourn in foreign countries.
  • * 1824, [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=0KdiM6l-qJtop_tme0z&id=qDBHz6VonZEC&pg=PA1&lpg=PA1&dq=peregrinating]
  • You know the inveterate peregrinating habits of the club, and can judge, from your own besetting propensity to change your residence monthly, how difficult it might prove to resist the temptation of traversing a soil that is still virgin, so far as the perambulating feet of the members of our fraternity are concerned.
  • * 1935, G. de Purucker, The Esoteric Tradition, Part Two [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN1417982810&id=xgoCsmI375EC&pg=PA765&lpg=PA765&dq=peregrinate&sig=pi0MJ50aG19SYuBfTLHF6TSE4nI]
  • He came first to recognise, then finally to know and to feel, that just as the atoms of his own physical body peregrinate' by efflux and influx in and out of his body, so does he as a human ‘life-atom’ or human Monad ' peregrinate by unceasing influx and efflux in and out of the regular series of his earth-lives which succeed one another uninterruptedly during his sojourn in a Planetary Round on this globe Earth of the planetary chain, and much, very much, more.
  • * 2000, Brenda Maddox, Nora: The Real Life of Molly Bloom [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0618057005&id=uEdgwQQscQ4C&pg=PA11&lpg=PA11&dq=peregrinated&sig=sIIHoIBH24WcEvOT2azATLbmoAE]
  • As their brood grew, Annie and Thomas Barnacle peregrinated through a tight circle of tenements and small houses at shabby addresses in the heart of Galway: Abbeygate Street, Raleigh Row, Newtownsmyth.
  • To travel through a specific place.
  • * 1876, Edward S. Wheeler, Scheyichbi and the Strand [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN1417920904&id=LCyGcTb-Af8C&pg=PA69&lpg=PA69&dq=peregrinates&sig=JqFzQzvC5TOwqRCgiL9-NKEoQxI]
  • History records no popular tumult, except of tongues, about the matter, but Jesse Hand never fully regained the regard of some people, and jealousy and distrust, like a curse, followed his new-fangled equipage; and though he and his generation are long since dead, yet the writer hath knowledge of traditions that, still drawn by attenuated and discouraged equines, a very Wandering Jew of vehicles, Jesse Hand’s carriage still peregrinates , at a toilsome pace, the interminable, sandy, woodland roads of Jersey.
  • * 1913, Marguerite Pollard, “The Message of Edward Carpenter,” in Theosophist Magazine [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0766152537&id=zv1eXjb-TZMC&pg=PA829&lpg=PA829&dq=peregrinate&sig=1_9HjqBTaI9h-IRUQ5tbc4PXPR4]
  • It is no longer hindered by any pride of race and can truthfully declare its readiness to “peregrinate every condition of man—with equal joy the lowest.”
  • * 2005, Jan Morris, The World: Travels 1950–2000 [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0393326489&id=zaTRIPsXsAkC&pg=PR13&lpg=PR13&dq=peregrinated&sig=HEyG3GEBaySv_3rdyw40qmcYvfA]
  • Anyway, as fledgling and as veteran, as man and as woman, as journalist and as aspirant littérateur, throught my half-century I peregrinated the world and wrote about it.
    Derived terms
    * peregrination * peregrine

    Etymology 2

    (etyl) , past participle of peregrinari.

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (rare) Peregrine; having traveled; foreign, exotic.
  • * c. 1595, Act V. Scene 1
  • His humour is lofty, his discourse peremptory, his tongue filed, his eye ambitious, his gait majestical and his general behaviour vain, ridiculous, and thrasonical. He is too picked, too spruce, too affected, too odd, as it were, too peregrinate , as I may call it.
  • * 1853, , My Novel [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0766107841&id=JIl0TtzfV1AC&pg=PA13&lpg=PA13&dq=peregrinate&sig=s281SrXnzTuDfqRaNHrwolIg0sY]
  • Imagine this figure, grotesque, peregrinate , and to the eye of a peasant certainly diabolical, then perch it on the stile in the midst of those green English fields, and in sight of that primitive English village; there let it sit straddling, its long legs dangling down, a short German pipe emitting clouds from one corner of those sardonic lips, its dark eyes glaring through the spectacles full upon the Parson, yet askant upon Lenny Fairfield. Lenny Fairfield looked exceedingly frightened.
  • * 1992, Julia Bolton Holloway, The Pilgrim and the Book [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0820420905&id=x0wYJrkBc08C&pg=RA2-PA130&lpg=RA2-PA130&dq=peregrinate&sig=kU3-LAXXKwKQb_GW3AnzXq8eryU]
  • Other apprentices on this pilgrimage have been the worldly Squire to the peregrinate' Knight to whom are juxtaposed the ' peregrinate Second Nun to the worldly Prioress.