different between traffic vs junction

traffic

English

Alternative forms

  • traffick

Etymology

From Middle French trafique, traffique (traffic), from Italian traffico (traffic) from trafficare (to carry on trade). Potentially from Vulgar Latin *tr?nsfr?c?re (to rub across); Klein instead suggests the Italian has ultimate origin in Arabic ????????? (tafr?q, distribution, dispersion), reshaped to match the native prefix tra- (trans-).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: tr?f'?k, IPA(key): /?t?æf?k/
  • Rhymes: -æf?k

Noun

traffic (usually uncountable, plural traffics)

  1. Moving pedestrians or vehicles, or the flux or passage thereof.
  2. Commercial transportation or exchange of goods, or the movement of passengers or people.
  3. Illegal trade or exchange of goods, often drugs.
  4. Exchange or flux of information, messages or data, as in a computer or telephone network.
    1. In CB radio, formal written messages relayed on behalf of others.
    2. (advertising) The amount of attention paid to a particular printed page etc. in a publication.
      • 1950, Advertising & Selling (volume 43, part 2, page 53)
        Those fixed locations which are sold to advertisers become preferred according to the expected page traffic.
  5. Commodities of the market.
    • You'll see a draggled damsel / From Billingsgate her fishy traffic bear.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

traffic (third-person singular simple present traffics, present participle trafficking, simple past and past participle trafficked)

  1. (intransitive) To pass goods and commodities from one person to another for an equivalent in goods or money; to buy or sell goods
    Synonym: trade
  2. (intransitive) To trade meanly or mercenarily; to bargain.
  3. (transitive) To exchange in traffic; to effect by a bargain or for a consideration.

Derived terms

  • trafficker
  • trafficking

Translations

References

  • traffic in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

traffic From the web:

  • what traffic sign is a rectangle
  • what traffic signs mean
  • what traffic sign is a circle
  • what traffic sign is a triangle
  • what traffic violations are felonies
  • what traffic sign is a pentagon
  • what traffic school is best for online
  • what traffic sign is a yellow triangle


junction

English

Etymology

From Latin i?ncti? (union, joining, uniting), from iung? (join, attach together). Equivalent to join +? -tion.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?d???k??n/
  • Rhymes: -??k??n

Noun

junction (plural junctions)

  1. The act of joining, or the state of being joined.
  2. A place where two things meet, especially where two roads meet.
  3. The boundary between two physically different materials, especially between conductors, semiconductors, or metals.
  4. (nautical) The place where a distributary departs from the main stream.
  5. (rail transport) A place where two or more railways or railroads meet.
  6. (radio, television) A point in time between two unrelated consecutive broadcasts.
    • 2007, Gary Hudson, Sarah Rowlands, The Broadcast Journalism Handbook (page 336)
      Even rolling news has junctions to meet - headlines on the hour or half-hour, or links to live events, for example.
  7. (computing, Microsoft Windows) A kind of symbolic link to a directory.
  8. (programming) In the Raku programming language, a construct representing a composite of several values connected by an operator.

Synonyms

  • (place where two things meet): intersection

Derived terms

Descendants

  • ? Bengali: ???? (jô??ôn)
  • ? Japanese: ???????

Translations

See also

  • crossroad
  • intersection

Verb

junction (third-person singular simple present junctions, present participle junctioning, simple past and past participle junctioned)

  1. (of roads or tracks) To form a junction.

junction From the web:

  • what junction box for lighting
  • what junction box is considered a pancake box
  • what junctions are like spot welds
  • what junction box for ceiling fan
  • what junction contributes to the cytoskeleton
  • what junction box to use
  • what junction am i on
  • what junction is heathrow on m4
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