0 to move about or travel, especially without a clear idea of what you are going to do:
After the bars close, gangs of youths roam the city streets.
She roamed around America for a year, working in bars and restaurants.
She enjoys his company, but occasionally he lets his hands roam where they shouldn't.
There are some people who are faithful and some who tend to roam.
She put up with a roaming husband in order to protect her child.
1 to connect to a mobile phone service that is not the one that you normally use, for example if you are in another country:
Livestock are allowed to roam unrestricted in these villages.
A punitive expedition of four thousand roamed the country murderously.
First, they roam and avoid various obstacles around them.
First, the manager will disregard the externality of the game roaming into the rangelands.
The war gave new voice to pre-war demands for the right to roam.
His father grounded the boy so that he would study and not roam in the streets.
One might suppose that those species (whales, birds) that are accustomed to roaming widely around the oceans could readily migrate in response to global warming.
She noted with concern the ' ' idle crowds ' ' and abandoned children roaming the streets bordered by run-down buildings in desperate need of repair.
中文繁体
閒逛(於), 漫步(於), 漫遊(於)…
More中文简体
闲逛(于), 漫步(于), 漫游(于)…
MoreEspañol
vagar (por), recorrer, deambular…
MorePortuguês
errar, vagar, caminhar sem destino…
More日本語
~をうろつく, (目的なく)~を歩き回る…
MoreTürk dili
gezinmek, avare avare dolaşmak…
MoreFrançais
traîner, errer…
MoreCatalan
rondar, vagar (per)…
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