daytrip
English
    
    
Noun
    
daytrip (plural daytrips)
- Alternative form of day trip
-  1999, Leanne Johnson, Lee Mei Foo, & Mick O'Halloran, Meetings Make Their Mark:- According to the DTES, average expenditure per daytrip in 1992 was $41, but was $63 for business or conference visitors. The equivalent figure from the present study was $124, suggesting that, even after allowing for inflation, daytrip visitors attending meetings, seminars and conferences spent more per trip than a typical daytrip visitor.
 
-  2012, Hannah Richell, The Secrets of the Tides, →ISBN, page 459:- I thought maybe . . . would you fancy a daytrip to London?
 
-  2012, Henk Bekker, Germany Pocket Adventures, →ISBN, page 218:- Lübeck is a popular daytrip from Hamburg, but few would regret staying longer.
 
 
-  
Verb
    
daytrip (third-person singular simple present daytrips, present participle daytripping, simple past and past participle daytripped)
- Alternative form of day-trip
-  2001, Matt Drudge, Drudge Manifesto, →ISBN:- She daytripped cross-country to star in her soap. With the travel and stress, she began using dope.
 
-  2006, Jean-Paul Pecqueur, The Case Against Happiness, →ISBN, page 46:- We've boarded ships piloting themselves across oceans portioned out to the last molecule just as we have daytripped over the sunburst the bountiful plains.
 
-  2010, Sonya Hartnett, Surrender, →ISBN:- She didn't invite me to join herself and her friends when they went swimming in the river or daytripped to a neighbouring town
 
 
-  
    This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.