Travel light
Take little baggage; also, be relatively free of responsibilities or deep thoughts, as in I can be ready in half an hour; I always travel light, or I don’t want to buy a house and get tied down; I like to travel light, or It’s hard to figure out whom they’ll attack next, because ideologically they travel light. The literal use dates from the 1920s, the figurative from the mid-1900s.
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verb (used without object), traveled, traveling or (especially British) travelled, travelling. 1. to go from one place to another, as by car, train, plane, or ship; take a trip; journey: to travel for pleasure. 2. to move or go from one place or point to another. 3. to proceed or advance in any way. 4. […]
- Travelling people
plural noun 1. (sometimes capitals) (Brit) Gypsies or other itinerant people: a term used esp by such people of themselves
- Travelling salesman
noun 1. a salesman who travels within an assigned territory in order to sell merchandise or to solicit orders for the commercial enterprise he represents by direct personal contact with customers and potential customers Also called commercial traveller, traveller travelling salesman problem
- Travelling salesman problem
algorithm, complexity (TSP or “shortest path”, US: “traveling”) Given a set of towns and the distances between them, determine the shortest path starting from a given town, passing through all the other towns and returning to the first town. This is a famous problem with a variety of solutions of varying complexity and efficiency. The […]
- Travelling wave
noun 1. a wave carrying energy away from its source (as modifier): a travelling-wave aerial