voyager

[ US /ˈvɔɪədʒɝ, ˈvɔɪɪdʒɝ/ ]
[ UK /vˈɔ‍ɪɪd‍ʒɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a traveler to a distant land (especially one who travels by sea)
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How To Use voyager In A Sentence

  • I mean, I loved Somewhere in Time in its day ... and Time and Again ... and Quantum Leap and Voyager and, you know, that show with the weirdly dressed fellow blipping about in a 1960's Police Box. RTD = Deceptively Playful
  • Nay, was not the "Araucana," which Spain acknowledges as its epic, written without even the aid of paper; on scraps of leather, as the stout fighter and voyager snatched any moment from that wild warfare? The Best of the World's Classics, Vol. V (of X) - Great Britain and Ireland III
  • Ah! hapless voyagers, gazing with simple wonder on these Circean shores! Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 8
  • Thirty years ago, the Voyager spacecraft were launched. Times, Sunday Times
  • The term monsoon, or "monsun," I may explain, is derived from an Arabic word, _mausim_, meaning "a set time, or season of the year;" and is generally applied to a system of regular wind currents, like the Trades, blowing in different hemispheres beyond the range of those old customers with which ordinary voyagers are familiar. On Board the Esmeralda Martin Leigh's Log - A Sea Story
  • Its last assignment was to find the heliopause, where the solar wind is offset by the galactic wind, but in April 1997 it was passed by a younger, faster Voyager spacecraft.
  • Ground-based data as well as the latest information from the Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft are used in developing both physical descriptions and theoretical understanding.
  • Like a lighthouse beacon, this magnetic field has guided ocean voyagers for hundreds of years.
  • So, unaware of what they had missed, the voyagers arrived in Bermuda on the evening of April 4, 1873, sliding to anchor at Grassy Bay with the aid of a local pilot standing at the foretop and directing the four men at the wheel.
  • De Gama caught the austral westerlies to hurl him past Africa; the Voyagers were boosted gravitationally as they sailed from planet to planet. Review of "Voyager," a book about the space probes, by Stephen J. Pyne
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