WordNet
adj. subject to much traffic or travel; "the region's most heavily traveled highways"
Usage examples of "heavily traveled".
I may find out if the roads are heavily traveled, if there is work I can take for a day or so to get a few coins.
Snow and ice turned to knee-deep mud in those areas heavily traveled by the feet of men and horses, and both feet and hooves had to be carefully cleaned and dried each night in case the mud froze to flesh.
As usual, the Caemlyn Road ran straight through the center of the town, but another heavily traveled highway came in from the south, too.
As one might imagine, this road was not heavily traveled, except, perhaps, by rats.
The causeway was always heavily traveled, and this morning was no different from any other.
The driver naturally fell onto those eastward roads that seemed most heavily traveled, and so we ended up following the deep wheel-ruts that had been scored across the ground by the heavy ox-carts in preceding days.
The strait was twenty miles across and speckled with islands, plus it was one of the most heavily traveled waterways in the world-- even now, despite the growing crisis.
The strait was twenty miles across and speckled with islands, plus it was one of the most heavily traveled waterways in the world—.
The listing track turned out to be more heavily traveled than any of the roads they had been on so far.
For one thing, the Russians themselves had made it easier by giving CARDINAL an apartment on a heavily traveled street.