noun, verb, rout⋅ed, rout⋅ing.| 1. | a course, way, or road for passage or travel: What's the shortest route to Boston? |
| 2. | a customary or regular line of passage or travel: a ship on the North Atlantic route. |
| 3. | a specific itinerary, round, or number of stops regularly visited by a person in the performance of his or her work or duty: a newspaper route; a mail carrier's route. |
| 4. | to fix the route of: to route a tour. |
| 5. | to send or forward by a particular route: to route mail to its proper destination. |
| 6. | go the route, Informal.
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route (rōōt, rout) n.
[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin rupta (via), broken (road), feminine past participle of rumpere, to break; see rout1.] |
route networking
/root/ The sequence of hosts, routers, bridges, gateways, and other devices that network traffic takes, or could take, from its source to its destination. As a verb, to determine the link down which to send a packet, that will minimise its total journey time according to some routeing algorithm.
You can find the route from your computer to another using the program traceroute on Unix or tracert on Microsoft Windows.
(2001-05-26)