traipse









traipse


traipse or trapes [treyps]Informal. ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for traipse on Thesaurus.com verb (used without object), traipsed, traips·ing.

  1. to walk or go aimlessly or idly or without finding or reaching one’s goal: We traipsed all over town looking for a copy of the book.

verb (used with object), traipsed, traips·ing.

  1. to walk over; tramp: to traipse the fields.

noun

  1. a tiring walk.

Origin of traipse 1585–95; earlier trapse, unexplained variant of trape, obscurely akin to tramp Related Words for traipse trudge, strut, plod, lumber, prance, roam, meander, amble, wander, stroll, traverse, march, parade, pace, hike, tour, promenade, stride, step, troop Examples from the Web for traipse Contemporary Examples of traipse

  • Buy a pair of these and traipse around a big city center or off road through the Icelandic countryside.

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    Allison McNearney

    November 29, 2014

  • Get your own tailored tuxedo blazer to traipse around town in.

    The Daily Beast’s 2014 Holiday Gift Guide: For the Carrie Bradshaw in Your Life

    Allison McNearney

    November 29, 2014

  • Its massive platform gives city dwellers the opportunity to traipse around with relatively painless added height.

    Jeffrey Campbell ‘Lita’ Bootie is The World’s Ugliest Shoe

    Misty White Sidell

    April 2, 2013

  • We imagine the cadre of Hollywood starlets who like to traipse about commando would be severely handicapped in this event.

    7 Craziest Guinness Records

    The Daily Beast Video

    November 13, 2009

  • Historical Examples of traipse

  • “Or why she consents to traipse all over the country with you,” laughed Ted.

    Ted Strong in Montana

    Edward C. Taylor

  • I don’t mean she’s got enough to traipse round with duchesses and earls and that sort, but she’s got enough.

    By the Light of the Soul

    Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

  • She called me up twice yesterday to see they needed it, as if I had nothin’ to do but traipse aroun’ after her.

    Mary Rose of Mifflin

    Frances R. Sterrett

  • And what’s more, you just don’t need to traipse along another step with me now.

    Bob Hampton of Placer

    Randall Parrish

  • Hard luck on me having to traipse at this time of night to a place I don’t know to get orders you ought to have sent out.

    Pushed and the Return Push

    George Herbert Fosdike Nichols, (AKA Quex)

  • British Dictionary definitions for traipse traipse trapes informal verb

    1. (intr) to walk heavily or tiredly

    noun

    1. a long or tiring walk; trudge

    Word Origin for traipse C16: of unknown origin Word Origin and History for traipse v.

    1590s, of uncertain origin, perhaps from dialectal French trepasser “pass over or beyond,” from Old French trespasser (see trespass). Or from a source related to Middle Dutch trappen, dialectal Norwegian trappa “to tread, stamp” (see trap). Liberman points out that it resembles German traben “tramp” “and other similar verbs meaning ‘tramp; wander; flee’ in several European languages. They seem to have been part of soldiers’ and vagabonds’ slang between 1400 and 1700. In all likelihood, they originated as onomatopoeias and spread to neighboring languages from Low German.” Related: Traipsed; traipsing.

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