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All jaunt synonyms

jaunt
J j

verb jaunt

  • set forth — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • weekend — the end of a week, especially the period of time between Friday evening and Monday morning: We spent the weekend at Virginia Beach.
  • peregrinate — to travel or journey, especially to walk on foot.
  • voyaging — a course of travel or passage, especially a long journey by water to a distant place.
  • set out — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • circuited — Simple past tense and past participle of circuit.
  • push on — to press upon or against (a thing) with force in order to move it away.
  • wander — to ramble without a definite purpose or objective; roam, rove, or stray: to wander over the earth.
  • gad — to move restlessly or aimlessly from one place to another: to gad about.
  • circumlocute — to speak in a circuitous way
  • vacationing — a period of suspension of work, study, or other activity, usually used for rest, recreation, or travel; recess or holiday: Schoolchildren are on vacation now.
  • circumnutate — to rotate slightly on a central axis
  • globetrotting — to travel throughout the world, especially regularly or frequently.
  • get through — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
  • holidaying — a day fixed by law or custom on which ordinary business is suspended in commemoration of some event or in honor of some person.
  • make way — manner, mode, or fashion: a new way of looking at a matter; to reply in a polite way.
  • knock around — to strike a sounding blow with the fist, knuckles, or anything hard, especially on a door, window, or the like, as in seeking admittance, calling attention, or giving a signal: to knock on the door before entering.
  • circumambulate — to walk around (something)
  • sightseeing — the act of visiting and seeing places and objects of interest.
  • aberrate — to deviate from what is normal or correct
  • make one's way — manner, mode, or fashion: a new way of looking at a matter; to reply in a polite way.
  • go places — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
  • 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.
  • sightsee — to go about seeing places and things of interest: In Rome, we only had two days to sightsee.
  • overnight — for or during the night: to stay overnight.
  • gallivant — to wander about, seeking pleasure or diversion; gad.
  • run around — to go quickly by moving the legs more rapidly than at a walk and in such a manner that for an instant in each step all or both feet are off the ground.
  • hit the trail — (Idiomatic) To leave or depart.
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