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untraversable

 - 3 dictionary results

trav⋅erse

[trav-ers, truh-vurs] verb, -ersed, -ers⋅ing, noun, adjective
–verb (used with object)
1. to pass or move over, along, or through.
2. to go to and fro over or along.
3. to extend across or over: A bridge traverses the stream.
4. to go up, down, or across (a rope, mountain, hill, etc.) at an angle: The climbers traversed the east face of the mountain.
5. to ski across (a hill or slope).
6. to cause to move laterally.
7. to look over, examine, or consider carefully; review; survey.
8. to go counter to; obstruct; thwart.
9. to contradict or deny.
10. Law.
a. (in the law of pleading) to deny formally (an allegation of fact set forth in a previous pleading).
b. to join issue upon.
11. to turn and point (a gun) in any direction.
–verb (used without object)
12. to pass along or go across something; cross: a point in the river where we could traverse.
13. to ski across a hill or slope on a diagonal.
14. to turn laterally, as a gun.
15. Fencing. to glide the blade toward the hilt of the contestant's foil while applying pressure to the blade.
–noun
16. the act of passing across, over, or through.
17. something that crosses, obstructs, or thwarts; obstacle.
18. a transversal or similar line.
19. a place where one may traverse or cross; crossing.
20. Architecture. a transverse gallery or loft of communication in a church or other large building.
21. a bar, strip, rod, or other structural part placed or extending across; crosspiece; crossbar.
22. a railing, lattice, or screen serving as a barrier.
23. Nautical.
a. the zigzag track of a vessel compelled by contrary winds or currents to sail on different courses.
b. each of the runs in a single direction made in such sailing.
24. Fortification.
a. a defensive barrier, parapet, or the like, placed transversely.
b. a defensive barrier thrown across the terreplein or the covered way of a fortification to protect it from enfilade fire.
25. Gunnery. the horizontal turning of a gun so as to make it point in any required direction.
26. Machinery.
a. the motion of a lathe tool or grinding wheel along a piece of work.
b. a part moving along a piece of work in this way, as the carriage of a lathe.
27. Surveying. a series of intersecting surveyed lines whose lengths and angles of intersection, measured at instrument stations, are recorded graphically on a map and in numerical form in data tables. Compare closed traverse.
28. Law. a formal denial of some matter of fact alleged by the other side.
–adjective
29. lying, extending, or passing across; transverse.

Origin:
1250–1300; (v.) ME traversen < MF traverser to cross < LL trānsversāre, deriv. of L trānsversus (see trans-, versus ); (n.) ME travers(e) < MF traverse (< L trānsversa something lying across, fem. of trānsversus) and travers (< L trānsversum passage across, neut. of trānsversus)


tra⋅vers⋅a⋅ble, adjective
tra⋅vers⋅al, noun
tra⋅vers⋅er, noun


1. cross. 9. gainsay, dispute, challenge.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Word Origin & History

traverse  (v.)
c.1325, "pass across, over, or through," from O.Fr. traverser "to cross, thwart" (11c.), from V.L. *traversare, from L. transversare "to cross, throw across," from L. transversus "turn across" (see transverse). The noun meaning "act of passing through a gate, crossing a bridge, etc." is recorded from 1347; meaning "a passage by which one may traverse" is recorded from 1678. Military foritifcation sense of "barrier, barricade" is recorded from 1599.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Legal Dictionary

Main Entry: tra·verse
Pronunciation: tr&-'v&rs, 'tra-"v&rs
Function: transitive verb
Etymology: Anglo-French traverser, literally, to lay across, bar, impede, from Old French, from Late Latin transversare to cross, from Latin transversus lying across
: to deny (as an allegation of fact or an indictment) in a legal proceeding
Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law, © 1996 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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