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View synonyms for route

route

[ root, rout ]

noun

  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:

    There's a ship from our company on the North Atlantic route.

  3. a specific itinerary, round, or number of stops regularly visited by a person in the performance of their work or duty:

    a newspaper route;

    a mail carrier's route.

    Synonyms: circuit, beat



verb (used with object)

, rout·ed, rout·ing.
  1. to set the path of:

    to route a tour.

  2. to send or forward by a particular course or road:

    It's the post office's job to route mail to its proper destination.

route

/ ruːt /

noun

  1. the choice of roads taken to get to a place
  2. a regular journey travelled
  3. capital a main road between cities

    Route 66

  4. mountaineering the direction or course taken by a climb
  5. med the means by which a drug or agent is administered or enters the body, such as by mouth or by injection

    oral route



verb

  1. to plan the route of; send by a particular route

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Usage

When forming the present participle or verbal noun from the verb to route it is preferable to retain the e in order to distinguish the word from routing , the present participle or verbal noun from rout 1, to defeat or rout 2, to dig, rummage: the routeing of buses from the city centre to the suburbs . The spelling routing in this sense is, however, sometimes encountered, esp in American English

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Other Words From

  • mis·route verb (used with object) misrouted misrouting
  • pre·route verb (used with object) prerouted prerouting
  • re·route verb rerouted rerouting

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Word History and Origins

Origin of route1

First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English: “way, course,” from Old French, from Latin rupta (via) “broken (road),” feminine past participle of rumpere “to break”; rout 1

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Word History and Origins

Origin of route1

C13: from Old French rute , from Vulgar Latin rupta via (unattested), literally: a broken (established) way, from Latin ruptus broken, from rumpere to break, burst

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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. go the route, Informal.
    1. to see something through to completion:

      It was a tough assignment, but he went the route.

    2. Baseball. to pitch the complete game:

      The heat and humidity were intolerable, but the pitcher managed to go the route.

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Example Sentences

Those industries would later build several dams along the route to provide hydroelectric power.

Well, the company going through the direct route is likely to pay fewer fees as they are hiring bankers as advisors rather than underwriters.

From Fortune

That route relies on a protein-cutting enzyme called TMPRSS2 to snip the knobby-looking spike protein studding the virus’s surface.

Visitors can walk or ride the Towpath Trail to follow the historic route of the Ohio & Erie Canal.

Those that didn’t take the layoffs route cut salaries for their employees.

From Quartz

Did the airline file a flight plan that took account of the weather en route from Surabaya, Indonesia, to Singapore?

AirAsia has now been grounded on this route by the Indonesians.

And increasingly smart navigation aids in the cockpit brought far greater precision and efficiency to route planning.

Otis, who tells me he was called “Saladin” on the inside, has taken an almost tragically circuitous route in getting here.

After a hit, they would adjust the search to the most likely route from there.

I do not think the average number of passengers on a corresponding route in our country could be so few as twenty.

Alice Arden, you little dream of the man and the route by which, possibly, deliverance is speeding to you.

Upon our return from this river Saint John, our route turned towards the country of the Armouchiquoys.

Mais, dpartans un peu de pense d'avec eux, comme nous fismes lors de presence, continuons nostre route et voyage.

This waterway was recently discovered, and by it there is a better route to Terrenate than was formerly followed.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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