traffic









traffic


noun

  1. the movement of vehicles, ships, persons, etc., in an area, along a street, through an air lane, over a water route, etc.: the heavy traffic on Main Street.
  2. the vehicles, persons, etc., moving in an area, along a street, etc.
  3. the transportation of goods for the purpose of trade, by sea, land, or air: ships of traffic.
  4. trade; buying and selling; commercial dealings.
  5. trade between different countries or places; commerce.
  6. the business done by a railroad or other carrier in the transportation of freight or passengers.
  7. the aggregate of freight, passengers, telephone or telegraph messages, etc., handled, especially in a given period.
  8. communication, dealings, or contact between persons or groups: traffic between the Democrats and the Republicans.
  9. mutual exchange or communication: traffic in ideas.
  10. trade in some specific commodity or service, often of an illegal nature: the vast traffic in narcotics.
  11. illegal commercial trade in human beings for the purpose of exploiting them: the traffic in young children.

verb (used without object), traf·ficked, traf·fick·ing.

  1. to carry on traffic, trade, or commercial dealings.
  2. to trade or deal in a specific commodity or service, often of an illegal nature (usually followed by in): to traffic in opium.

verb (used with object), traf·ficked, traf·fick·ing.

  1. (of vehicles or persons) to move over or through (a place): It’s a heavily trafficked bridge.
  2. to trade or deal in (a commodity or service): to traffic guns.
  3. to trade in (human beings) for the purpose of exploitation: He was convicted for trafficking illegal immigrants.

noun

    1. the vehicles coming and going in a street, town, etc
    2. (as modifier)traffic lights
  1. the movement of vehicles, people, etc, in a particular place or for a particular purposesea traffic
    1. the business of commercial transportation by land, sea, or air
    2. the freight, passengers, etc, transported
  2. (usually foll by with) dealings or businesshave no traffic with that man
  3. trade, esp of an illicit or improper kinddrug traffic
  4. the aggregate volume of messages transmitted through a communications system in a given period
  5. mainly US the number of customers patronizing a commercial establishment in a given time period

verb -fics, -ficking or -ficked (intr)

  1. (often foll by in) to carry on trade or business, esp of an illicit kind
  2. (usually foll by with) to have dealings
n.

c.1500, “trade, commerce,” from Middle French trafique (mid-15c.), from Italian traffico (early 14c.), from trafficare “carry on trade,” of uncertain origin, perhaps from a Vulgar Latin *transfricare “to rub across” (from Latin trans- “across” + fricare “to rub”), with the original sense of the Italian verb being “touch repeatedly, handle.”

Or the second element may be an unexplained alteration of Latin facere “to make, do.” Klein suggests ultimate derivation of the Italian word from Arabic tafriq “distribution.” Meaning “people and vehicles coming and going” first recorded 1825. Traffic jam is 1917, ousting earlier traffic block (1895).

v.

1540s, from traffic (n.) and preserving the original commercial sense. Related: Trafficked; trafficking. The -k- is inserted to preserve the “k” sound of -c- before a suffix beginning in -i-, -y-, or -e- (cf. picnic/picnicking, panic/panicky, shellac/shellacked).

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