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All globetrot synonyms

globe·trot
G g

verb globetrot

  • maunder — to talk in a rambling, foolish, or meaningless way.
  • roll — to move along a surface by revolving or turning over and over, as a ball or a wheel.
  • hit the road — a long, narrow stretch with a smoothed or paved surface, made for traveling by motor vehicle, carriage, etc., between two or more points; street or highway.
  • pass over — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • hit the trail — (Idiomatic) To leave or depart.
  • follow one's nose — the part of the face or facial region in humans and certain animals that contains the nostrils and the organs of smell and functions as the usual passageway for air in respiration: in humans it is a prominence in the center of the face formed of bone and cartilage, serving also to modify or modulate the voice.
  • journey — a traveling from one place to another, usually taking a rather long time; trip: a six-day journey across the desert.
  • tourGeorges de [zhawrzh duh] /ʒɔrʒ də/ (Show IPA), 1593–1652, French painter.
  • shuttle — a device in a loom for passing or shooting the weft thread through the shed from one side of the web to the other, usually consisting of a boat-shaped piece of wood containing a bobbin on which the weft thread is wound.
  • backpack — A backpack is a bag with straps that go over your shoulders, so that you can carry things on your back when you are walking or climbing.
  • explore — Travel in or through (an unfamiliar country or area) in order to learn about or familiarize oneself with it.
  • wander — to ramble without a definite purpose or objective; roam, rove, or stray: to wander over the earth.
  • encompass — Surround and have or hold within.
  • aberrate — to deviate from what is normal or correct
  • circumlocute — to speak in a circuitous way
  • circumnutate — to rotate slightly on a central axis
  • hopscotch — a children's game in which a player tosses or kicks a small flat stone, beanbag, or other object into one of several numbered sections of a diagram marked on the pavement or ground and then hops on one foot over the lines from section to section and picks up the stone or object, usually while standing on one foot in an adjacent section.
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