0 a journey in which you go somewhere, usually for a short time, and come back again: --
I was thinking we could go on a shopping trip to New York this weekend.
She's away on a business trip and won't be back until next week.
I thought we might hire a motorboat and take a trip round/around the bay.
We're going on a trip to Norway this summer.
The trip from York to Newcastle takes about an hour by train.
1 an occasion when you knock your foot against something and fall or lose your balance, or someone causes you to do this, when you are walking or running: --
2 an experience in which someone sees, hears, or feels things that do not exist as a result of taking an illegal drug: --
3 to lose your balance after knocking your foot against something when you are walking or running, or to cause someone to do this: --
5 to move a switch that operates an electrical system, or to cause such a system to start or stop working by moving a switch: --
For all four men, regular vacations and business trips have provided time to investigate potential markets and find likely buyers.
If plaintiffs lived in remote villages, they had to make overnight trips to the yamen courts in designated cities.
Gandhians made frequent trips, giving lectures, writing books, and winning support for nonviolence.
After all, when you are immortal (or nearly so), all trips are the same length.
In a traditional shopping trip, the buyer interacts with vendors directly by visiting their shops.
According to the interviews, seal and beluga hunts often require long trips, making the operation costs of a canoe with an outboard engine prohibitive.
The second author guided these trips, during in which other elders and hunters were met occasionally.
This results in a development length of 1500 trip heights before the location where the flat-plate profiles are measured.