Travelable
Synonyms for travelable
adj clear and able to be traveled
navigable
reachable
graded
accessible
attainable
beaten
broad
easy
fair
open
penetrable
traveled
unobstructed
unblocked
crossable
motorable
traversable
Antonyms for travelable
excellent
exceptional
superior
blocked
obstructed
Synonyms
adj traversable
passable
accessible
open
safe
Usage Notes
The word travel has come to exemplify a common spelling quandary: to double or not to double the final consonant of a verb before adding the ending that forms the past tense (–ed) or the ending that forms the present-participle (–ing.) We see it done both ways—sometimes with the same word (travel, traveled, traveling; travel, travelled, travelling). As readers, we accept these variations without even thinking about them. But as writers, we need to know just when we should double that final consonant and when we should not. Because American practice differs slightly from British practice, there is no one answer. But there are well-established conventions. In American writing, when you have a one-syllable verb that ends with a single vowel followed by a single consonant, and you want to add a regular inflectional ending that begins with a vowel, you double that final consonant before adding -ed or -ing: stop, stopped, stopping; flag, flagged, flagging. This principle also holds for verbs of more than one syllable if the final syllable is stressed: permit, permitted, permitting; refer, referred, referring. If that syllable is not stressed, there is no doubling of the final consonant: gallop, galloped, galloping; travel, traveled, traveling. British spelling conventions are similar. They deviate from American practices only when the verb ends with a single vowel followed by an l. In that case, no matter the stress pattern, the final l gets doubled. Thus British writing has repel, repelled, repelling (as would American writing, since the final syllable is stressed). But it also has travel, travelled, travelling and cancel, cancelled, cancelling, since in the context of British writing the verb’s final l, not its stress pattern, is the determining factor. Verbs ending in other consonants have the same doubling patterns that they would have in American writing. An outlier on both sides of the Atlantic is the small group of verbs ending in -ic and one lonely -ac verb. They require an added k before inflectional endings in order to retain the appropriate “hard” sound of the letter c: panic, panicked, panicking; frolic, frolicked, frolicking; shellac, shellacked, shellacking. Canadians, of course, are free to use either British or American spellings.
Read Also:
- Traveled on foot
Synonyms for traveled on foot verb walk trudge strut plod lumber prance roam meander amble wander stroll traverse march parade pace hike tour promenade stride step troop rove shuffle gad trek ambulate knock about go on foot take a walk travel on foot Antonyms for traveled on foot tiptoe run stay go direct Synonyms verb […]
- Traveled over
Synonyms for traveled over verb cross over; travel span tread crisscross cross ply bisect roam pass over go over bridge peregrinate do track decussate perambulate cover negotiate walk pace range intersect quarter wander transverse cut across pass through go across move over travel over Antonyms for traveled over stay back up confirm
- Traveler
Synonyms for traveler noun person who journeys passenger tourist commuter adventurer migrant sailor pilgrim sightseer tripper drifter gypsy vagabond navigator truant rover wanderer itinerant vagrant tramp gadabout seafarer explorer peddler nomad bum wayfarer hobo excursionist displaced person transmigrant hiker roamer haj trouper barnstormer rambler voyager floater globetrotter journeyer trekker expeditionist jet-setter junketer Concept Thesaurus for […]
- Traveler check
Synonyms for traveler check noun special type of bank check banker’s check traveler’s cheque
- Traveler's check
Synonyms for traveler’s check noun special type of bank check banker’s check traveler’s cheque