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traject
[ truh-jekt ]
verb (used with object)
- to transport, transmit, or transpose.
traject
/ trəˈdʒɛkt /
verb
- archaic.tr to transport or transmit
Derived Forms
- traˈjection, noun
Other Words From
- tra·jection noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of traject1
Example Sentences
“If we traject the continued used of HFC for cooling etcetera around the world … we are talking about the equivalent of half a degree centigrade global warming rise,” he said.
But it took them rather more than twice the ordinary time to accomplish the traject, nor did they arrive at the point whence artificial transport could be used until long after the hour when they had reckoned upon sitting safe and snug at table d’hôte in the Hôtel Mont Cervin at Zermatt.
Kennedy might very well be alive had the motorcade followed the logical traject: straight along Main Street.
How they have effected the traject here, and by what process, or contingency, are merely curious questions, and can never be satisfactorily answered.
Assassinated with terror, I make demand of Pasquale; he admits that he may have slept during the long traject up the hill.
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