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"Star Trek" trip
Answer for the clue ""Star Trek" trip ", 6 letters:
voyage
Alternative clues for the word voyage
Word definitions for voyage in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Voyage \Voy"age\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Voyaged ; p. pr. & vb. n. Voyaging .] [Cf. F. voyager.] To take a voyage; especially, to sail or pass by water. A mind forever Voyaging through strange seas of thought alone. --Wordsworth.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Voyage is a 1996 hard science fiction novel by British author Stephen Baxter . The book depicts a manned mission to Mars as it might have been in another timeline , one where John F. Kennedy survived the assassination attempt on him on November 22, 1963. ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES arduous journey/voyage ▪ an arduous journey through the mountains bon voyage solo flight/voyage/ascent ▪ Ridgeway’s solo voyage across the Atlantic undertake a journey/voyage ▪ You should not undertake a long journey ...
Usage examples of voyage.
O Queen Rabesqurat, the haven of our voyage was Aklis, and we feared delay, seeing the fire of the mountain ablaze with expectations of us.
Duff, a New Zealand anthropologist who has made a special study of adze distributions, claiming that no adzes with butts tanged as an aid in lashing the handles have been established for Western Polynesia, whereas tanged adzes have been found throughout Eastern Polynesia, has argued that this is not in accord with what one would expect from random voyaging.
Obviously, therefore, there must have been some explanation for the absence of tanged adzes from Western Polynesia other than that random voyages did not occur.
The plan had been to avoid any Aenean, Pax, or Ouster worlds or strongholds found along their long voyage away from human space.
Charles is in weak health just now, only clear of a quartan ague, and it is likely he will keep his cabin most of the voyage.
The explorers had made their voyages, planted their colonists in the West, left their sons, their axes, and their carved runes in Alata and retreated from it, leaving only legends in the land that was not for them.
I may observe that on this occasion we had an opportunity of ascertaining that good Burgundy, well racked off, and in casks hermetically sealed, does not lose its quality on a sea voyage.
Tasman, therefore, unless he succeeded in obtaining copies in Banda, must have started on his voyage of exploration without these documents which were so essential to his success in identifying the localities visited and charted by Carstenszoon.
But international law accepted the doctrine of continuous voyage, by which contraband could be taken anywhere on the high seas, provided, of course, that the blockader could prove his case.
Presumption becoming proof by further evidence, the doctrine of continuous voyage could be used in favor of the blockaders who stopped the contraband at sea between the neutral ports.
Therefore the question arises, did Gomez de Sequeira make two voyages that year, or is the voyage reported by Galvano the same as the one which, according to Barbie du Bocage, led to the discovery of Australia?
The most fervent patriot must admit that the early voyages of Drake were, to put it mildly, of a buccaneering kind, although his late voyages were more nearly akin to privateering cruises than piracy.
Earl was not prompted to spend his life and fortune on buccaneering voyages merely by greed of plunder, but was chiefly inspired by intense love of his country, loyalty to his Queen, and bitter hatred of the Spaniards.
Falling ill through vexation and despair, he passed into the hands of a surgeon, who proved kind to him and finally gave him his liberty for 100 pieces of eight, to be paid after his first buccaneering voyage.
The joints of the Bucentaur are racked by time and many voyages to the Lido.