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View synonyms for portage

portage

1

[ pawr-tij, pohr-, pawr-tahzh ]

noun

  1. the act of carrying; carriage.
  2. the carrying of boats, goods, etc., overland from one navigable water to another.
  3. the route over which this is done.
  4. the cost of carriage.


verb (used without object)

, por·taged, por·tag·ing.
  1. to make a portage:

    On this stretch of the river, we have to portage for a mile.

verb (used with object)

, por·taged, por·tag·ing.
  1. to carry (something) over a portage; make a portage with:

    We portaged our canoe around the rapids.

Portage

2

[ pawr-tij, pohr- ]

noun

  1. a city in SW Michigan.
  2. a town in NW Indiana.

portage

/ pɔrtaʒ; ˈpɔːtɪdʒ /

noun

  1. the act of carrying; transport
  2. the cost of carrying or transporting
  3. the act or process of transporting boats, supplies, etc, overland between navigable waterways
  4. the route overland used for such transport


verb

  1. to transport (boats, supplies, etc) overland between navigable waterways

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Word History and Origins

Origin of portage1

1375–1425; late Middle English < Middle French; port 5, -age

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Word History and Origins

Origin of portage1

C15: from French, from Old French porter to carry

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Example Sentences

They’ll also let you know about potential obstacles like rough water or portages, where you’ll have to carry your boat to get through stretches of river with shallow beds or dams.

Cascade Mountain, ten minutes from Portage, Wisconsin, on Interstate 90, is a family-owned hill with lift tickets starting at $75.

For shorter outings in Vermont, paddlers should target the faster-flowing stretches beneath dams and try to end the day at a campsite before the next portage.

Otherwise, it’s really, really easy to spend 10 or 15 minutes milling around at the start and finish of every portage, and there are two problems with this.

On the map, look for areas that can only be accessed via a significant portage, ideally a mile or more.

Right then we switched to rock portage and charged back down the beach to get the IBS into the water.

It would have been less labor to have tied the beasts, put them into the boat, and hauled it across the portage.

It was three o'clock in the afternoon when they commenced their preparations for making this extraordinary portage.

Making up their bundles as usual, they commenced a struggle with the intricacies and obstacles of the portage.

The place of transit from one river to the other was known for years as the Portage.

The portage was a long mile but the girls were accustomed to hiking and took it at a brisk pace.

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petrichor

[pet-ri-kawr]

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PortadownPortage la Prairie