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单词 traffic
释义

trafficn.

Brit. /ˈtrafɪk/, U.S. /ˈtræfɪk/
Forms:

α. 1500s traffycke, 1500s traffyke, 1500s traffykkes (plural), 1500s–1600s trafficke, 1500s–1600s traffik, 1500s–1600s traffike, 1500s–1600s traffyck, 1500s–1600s traffyque, 1500s–1700s trafficque, 1500s–1700s traffique, 1500s–1800s traffick, 1500s– traffic, 1600s traffack, 1600s traffact, 1600s traffake; Scottish pre-1700 traffacte, pre-1700 traffecque, pre-1700 traffeque, pre-1700 trafficc, pre-1700 trafficke, pre-1700 trafficque, pre-1700 traffict, pre-1700 traffik, pre-1700 traffiqwie, pre-1700 traffoque, pre-1700 traffyque, pre-1700 traiffect, pre-1700 treffik, pre-1700 treffique, pre-1700 treffyk, pre-1700 1700s traffect, pre-1700 1700s– traffic, pre-1700 1800s– traffeck, pre-1700 1900s traffique, 1900s traffike.

β. 1500s traffigo, 1500s traffygo.

γ. 1500s traficque, 1500s trafik, 1500s trafycke, 1500s trafycque, 1500s trafyke, 1500s trafyque, 1500s–1600s trafick, 1500s–1600s traficke, 1500s–1600s trafike, 1500s–1600s trafique, 1600s–1800s trafic; Scottish pre-1700 trafect, pre-1700 trafek, pre-1700 trafict, pre-1700 trafik, pre-1700 trafique, pre-1700 traphik, pre-1700 trefek, pre-1700 trefique, pre-1700 1800s trafeque, pre-1700 1900s– trafeck, 1900s trafike, 1900s– trifikes (plural).

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Italian. Etymons: French trafique, traffic; Italian traffico.
Etymology: < (i) Middle French trafic, traficque, trafique, traffic, trafficque, traphique (French trafic ) commerce, trade, especially long-distance trade (1339; frequently from 1541 with reference to dealing or bargaining in something which should not be made the subject of trade, e.g. (in Calvin) the sale of indulgences), intrigue, scheming (late 15th cent.; the neutral sense ‘enterprise, undertaking’ is not paralleled in French until later than in English: 1552), and its etymon (ii) Italian traffico, †trafico commerce, trade (a1348; from 18th cent. with negative connotation), occupation, dealings (a1419), apparently < Italian trafficare traffic v. (for the ulterior etymology, see discussion at that entry), although post-classical Latin trafica (see note) may imply much earlier currency of the noun in Italian. Foreign-language parallels. Compare post-classical Latin trafica (late 9th cent. in an Italian source), Old Occitan trafec , trafey (13th cent., earliest in the sense ‘intrigue’), Spanish tráfico (early 17th cent.; mid-15th cent. as tráfago ), Portuguese tráfico (1516; 15th cent. as tráfego ). Specific forms. The Older Scots forms in -ct- are reverse spellings reflecting 15th-cent. loss of /t/ after /k/ in other words (e.g. effect n.).
I. Senses relating to the commercial transportation of goods or commodities.
* Senses relating to the activity or business of commercial transportation of goods or commodities, or to other dealings.
1. Probably: an intrigue, a scheme. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1505 in J. Gairdner Lett. Reigns of Richard III & Henry VII (1863) II. App. D. 381 Asfor K. H. [i.e. King Henry's] traffykkes they knewe theym wele ynough and better than ye did.
2.
a. The commercial transportation of goods or commodities on a large scale from one nation or community to another for the purpose of buying and selling; commerce. Also more generally: the buying and selling or exchange of goods and commodities for profit; trade, business.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > importing and exporting > [noun]
traffic1511
disportation1622
society > trade and finance > [noun]
mongingOE
cheapinga1000
cheapOE
chaffer?c1225
merchandisea1300
market-making1340
merchandyc1350
corseriec1380
chafferinga1382
need-doinga1382
changea1387
chapmanhoodc1386
cossery?a1400
bargaining1401
merchandisinga1425
merchandrya1450
intercourse1473
business1478
chapmanry1483
the feat of merchandisec1503
market1525
trade1549
marting1553
contractation1555
trading1556
merchantryc1560
marketing1561
mart1562
trafficking1570
contraction1582
tract1582
nundination1586
commerce1587
chafferya1599
negotiation1601
intertraffica1603
traffic1603
commercery1604
intertrading1606
correspondence1607
mercature1611
correspondency1613
coss?1635
negotiating1640
dealing1691
chapmanship1727
merchanting1883
intertrade1915
society > occupation and work > business affairs > [noun]
affairs?1473
business1478
negocies1598
traffic1603
system1651
concernsa1676
business model1832
1511 Pylgrymage Richarde Guylforde (Pynson) f. xliiijv We founde also at Candy .ij. other Galyes venysyans ladynge Maluesyes called the Galeys of traffygo.
1549 W. Thomas Hist. Italie f. 1v How commodious the countrey is..to the trafficque of them that liue by merchaundise.
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 38 A citie..to quhilke the frenche men and Spaniȝeards oft because of thair treffik sailed ouir.
1603 G. de Malynes Englands View Ep. Ded. sig. A3 A due consideration must be had of the course of Commodities, Money, and Exchange: which are the essentiall parts of all trade and trafficke.
1697 J. Evelyn Numismata i. 3 Antient Moneys..first used in Trafick.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 296 It was not the Way to or from any Part of the World, where the English had any Traffick.
1727 W. Mather Young Man's Compan. (ed. 13) 396 Traffick then is the Bartering, Bargaining, or Exchanging of one Man with another.
1848 H. H. Wilson Hist. Brit. India 1805–35 III. iv. 128 After a brief interval, Prome again became the seat of industry and traffic.
1860 J. L. Motley Hist. United Netherlands I. i. 7 Cadiz,..seated by the straits where the ancient and modern systems of traffic were blending like the mingling of the two oceans.
1909 Geogr. Jrnl. 40 463 For a thousand years.., European traffic was chiefly by boat, either coastwise or riverwise.
2019 Naval War Coll. Rev. 72 i. 101 The most decisive effect on the war in the Atlantic would come from cutting off traffic between North America and Britain across the North Atlantic.
b. A voyage or expedition undertaken for trading purposes. Cf. trade n. 9b. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > a journey > [noun] > expedition > for trade
traffic1548
trade1569
togt1860
1548 Hall's Vnion: Edward IV f. ccxli Thether was one of their common trafficques and ventes, of all their Merchaundice.
1598 R. Hakluyt (title) The principal navigations, voiages, traffiqves and discoueries of the English nation.
1611 E. India Co. Comm. 4 Apr. in A. Farrington Eng. Factory in Japan (1991) II. 979 And in all theis your passadges & traffiques our desire is that you should informe yourselfe of safe harbors.
c. An instance of commercial transportation of goods or commodities; a commercial transaction or relationship; a line of business or trade.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > [noun] > an act of trading
market1521
traffic1556
contraction1583
transact1659
trade1697
deal1837
1556 Proclam. Philip & Mary 22 Dec. (single sheet) So doth their Maiesties by this their proclamation straitelye charge and commaund al their subiects.., that they and euerye of them in all their traffiques, byinges and sellynges do quietly and obediently receyue vtter and paye aswel the said coyne or monye called testons as all other coygnes or monyes.
1578 T. Ellis True Rep. Last Voy. Meta Incognita sig. Avv We did coniecture, that they had either Artificers among them, or els a trafficke with some other nation.
1652 J. Darell Strange News from Indies 4 Their exporting hence our owne coine..in as great quantities to maintaine a Traffique of 100. or 150000 li. per annum, as the Dutch to maintain a Trade of 2000000 li. per an. or more.
1767 Gazeteer & New Daily Advertiser 13 Nov. Mexico and Vera Cruz are principally supplied by these south sea traders; so that they very seldom attempt a traffic on their own bottom, to Jamaica.
1818 W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian viii, in Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. III. 210 She..had now, under pretence of a trifling traffic, resumed predatory habits.
1985 Headlight June 46/4 The company had two main traffics, the carriage of building materials and the carriage of carpets.
2014 Pacific Hist. Rev. 83 226 There was a thriving traffic in treasure across the Pacific.
d. The activity or business of acquiring, transporting, and selling something which, for legal or moral reasons, should not be treated as a mere commodity; trade of an illegal, immoral, or otherwise objectionable nature; an instance of this. Cf. trafficking n. 2.See also drug traffic n.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > illegal or immoral trading > [noun]
trafficking1570
traffic1583
horse-corsing1602
mongering1846
pinhooking1962
1583 M. M. S. tr. B. de las Casas Spanish Colonie sig. Gv That saide Lorde..commaunded all his subiectes,..that they shoulde returne in exchaunge of that ware Indies and Indisses to make slaues of. The Indians beeing affeard, those which had two children, gaue him one, and he that had three gaue him two. This was the ende of this sacrilegious trafficke.
1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies v. xxx. 426 Those which made it a trafficke to buy and sell slaves.
1663 S. Patrick Parable of Pilgrim (1687) xxi. 220 Their courtesies are meer traffique, and they always expect to gain more than they give.
1702 Eng. Theophrastus 105 They make a Traffick of Honour, and pay for it with the wind of fair Words.
1786 E. Burke Articles of Charge against W. Hastings in Wks. (1813) XII. 202 Engaged in a low, clandestine traffick, prohibited by the laws of the Country.
1818 Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 33 686 It is notorious, that seats in the House of Commons are an article of traffick as much as any commercial or manufactured article.
1880 ‘Mrs. Forrester’ Roy & Viola I. 19 You make the most shameless traffic and barter of yourselves and each other.
1981 A. Schlee Rhine Journey x. 135 This man was no ordinary thief, but was engaged in a traffic which might help political offenders to escape.
2015 N. Scheper-Hughes in M. Dragiewicz Global Human Trafficking vi. 87 The EU,..the United States Department of Justice, and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime should pay more attention to combating the global traffic in humans for illicit and clandestine transplants.
3. figurative.
a. Activity likened to the commercial transportation of goods or commodities, or to trade more generally; business, enterprise; an instance of this, an exchange.In quot. 1550 with reference to Athenian and Spartan military and diplomatic activity in 421 b.c. in the aftermath of the Peace of Nicias.
ΚΠ
1550 T. Nicolls tr. Thucydides Hist. Peloponnesian War v. v. f. cxxxiiiiv (heading) How the Athenyans and Lacedemonyans entermeddledde and vsed theire traffique that same sommer, lyuynge in doubte and dissimulation the one wyth the othere.
1570 G. Buchanan Chamæleon in Vernac. Writings (1892) 46 The ouersey trafficque of mariage growing cauld.
1633 Bp. J. Hall Occas. Medit. (ed. 3) §cxxv. 313 Surely this very traffique of faculties is that, whereby we live..one man lends a braine; another an arme; one; a tongue, another, an hand.
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. x. 236 I am stout enough to exchange buffets with any who will challenge me to such a traffic.
1933 J. Hilton Lost Horizon (1949) viii. 187 Does it not charm you to think of wise and serene friendships, a long and kindly traffic of the mind from which death may not call you away with his customary hurry?
2012 in R. Lettevall et al. Neutrality in 20th-cent. Europe 337 The traffic of ideas among technocratic networks within Western Europe and the United States.
b. Without implication of trade: dealings, communication, social interaction. Now chiefly in to have no (or little) traffic with (a person or thing); cf. to have no truck with at truck n.1 3a. Sc. National Dict. (at Traffeck n. & v.) records this sense as in use in Shetland, Banffshire, Aberdeenshire, and Angus in 1972.
ΚΠ
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cccxxxixv That secreat trafficke, that thou haste with infidels.
1633 T. Stafford Pacata Hibernia i. xv. 96 The President..returned him no Answer.., utterly refusing any further traffique with him.
1727 D. Defoe Syst. Magick i. iii. 64 Perhaps they were not harden'd enough at first for the carrying on such a Traffick [i.e. dealings with the Devil].
1831 N.-Y. Mirror 19 Nov. 158/3 I have had so little traffic with my fellow-creatures that I am destitute of numberous little pieces of knowledges requisite in all who would mingle with them without being ridiculous.
1893 R. L. Stevenson Catriona xxviii. 337 Our traffic is settled.
1926 Aberdeen Univ. Rev. Mar. 116 Ony gran' body 'at hid mair trafféck hid tae sen' his ain messenger.
2002 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 21 June 35 His spare, somber interiors and portraits had no traffic with the developing language of modernism.
** Things transported or traded, and extended uses.
4.
a. Goods or merchandise transported for commercial purposes; saleable commodities. Also occasionally as a count noun. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > merchandise > [noun]
warec1000
warec1000
cheapingc1200
chaffer1297
gooda1300
merchandisec1300
harnessc1386
pennyworths1403
haberdashery1419
merchandya1425
mercimonyc1460
merchantyc1485
merchandrise?1495
haberdasha1529
traffic1533
chaffery1535
trade1645
Manchester goods1705
stuff1708
sundries1740
business model1832
Manchester1920
tradables1921
durable1930
1533 T. Elyot Of Knowl. Wise Man iv. f. 66 The couaytouse marchaunt..with his sayles and sterrne presumeth to inforce the wyndes to brynge hym in to those costes, from whens he may brynge home that myserable trafike, wheron he wil consume al his study & wyt.
1560 in R. G. Marsden Sel. Pleas Court Admiralty (1897) II. 119 In which shipps there be any merchaundizes or traffick apperteining to the ennemies.
1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta Nat. & Morall Hist. Indies iv. xxii. 271 The Cacao..is so much esteemed amongest the Indians (yea and among the Spaniards) that it is one of the richest and the greatest traffickes of new Spaine.
1716 J. Gay Trivia ii. 22 You'll see a draggled Damsel, here and there, From Billingsgate her fishy Traffic bear.
1778 R. Lowth Isaiah xxiii. 18 Her traffic and her gain, shall be holy to Jehovah: It shall not be treasured, nor shall it be kept in store.
b. The travelling equipment of an army; baggage. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > aspects of travel > a journey > [noun] > equipment for a journey > baggage
trousseauc1230
harnessc1330
fardel1388
flittinga1400
stuff?a1400
baggagec1430
trussellc1440
carriagec1450
trussagec1500
traffic1538
trussery1548
traffe1566
sumpture1567
truss1587
needment1590
luggage1596
sumptery1620
piece1809
traps1813
roll-up1831
dunnage1834
kit1834
way baggage1836
swag1853
drum1861
swag bag1892
1538 T. Elyot Dict. Impedimenta, is the caryage and trafyke, that goth with the hooste.
1539 R. Morison tr. Frontinus Strategemes & Policies Warre iv. i. sig. Liiii Caius Marius, somewhat to ease the armie in carieng their traficke and baggage.., deuysed their vessels and vittayles into fardels laide vpon staues.
1548 Hall's Vnion: Richard III f. liijv In the myddle parte of the armye he appoynted the trafficke and cariage apperteignynge to the armye.
5. A prostitute. Cf. trader n. 2, and also baggage n. 6. Obsolete. rare.In quot. 1590 perhaps in punning allusion to this sense.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > prostitution > [noun] > a prostitute
meretrixOE
whoreOE
soiled dovea1250
common womanc1330
putec1384
bordel womanc1405
putaina1425
brothelc1450
harlot?a1475
public womanc1510
naughty pack?1529
draba1533
cat1535
strange woman1535
stew1552
causey-paikera1555
putanie?1566
drivelling1570
twigger1573
punka1575
hackney1579
customer1583
commodity1591
streetwalker1591
traffic1591
trug1591
hackster1592
polecat1593
stale1593
mermaid1595
medlar1597
occupant1598
Paphian1598
Winchester goose1598
pagan1600
hell-moth1602
aunt1604
moll1604
prostitution1605
community1606
miss1606
night-worm1606
bat1607
croshabell1607
prostitute1607
pug1607
venturer1607
nag1608
curtal1611
jumbler1611
land-frigate1611
walk-street1611
doll-common1612
turn-up1612
barber's chaira1616
commonera1616
public commonera1616
trader1615
venturea1616
stewpot1616
tweak1617
carry-knave1623
prostibule1623
fling-dusta1625
mar-taila1625
night-shadea1625
waistcoateera1625
night trader1630
coolera1632
meretrician1631
painted ladya1637
treadle1638
buttock1641
night-walker1648
mob?1650
lady (also girl, etc.) of the game1651
lady of pleasure1652
trugmullion1654
fallen woman1659
girlc1662
high-flyer1663
fireship1665
quaedama1670
small girl1671
visor-mask1672
vizard-mask1672
bulker1673
marmalade-madam1674
town miss1675
town woman1675
lady of the night1677
mawks1677
fling-stink1679
Whetstone whore1684
man-leech1687
nocturnal1693
hack1699
strum1699
fille de joie1705
market-dame1706
screw1725
girl of (the) town1733
Cytherean1751
street girl1764
monnisher1765
lady of easy virtue1766
woman (also lady) of the town1766
kennel-nymph1771
chicken1782
stargazer1785
loose fish1809
receiver general1811
Cyprian1819
mollya1822
dolly-mop1834
hooker1845
charver1846
tail1846
horse-breaker1861
professional1862
flagger1865
cocodette1867
cocotte1867
queen's woman1871
common prostitute1875
joro1884
geisha1887
horizontal1888
flossy1893
moth1896
girl of the pavement1900
pross1902
prossie1902
pusher1902
split-arse mechanic1903
broad1914
shawl1922
bum1923
quiff1923
hustler1924
lady of the evening1924
prostie1926
working girl1928
prostisciutto1930
maggie1932
brass1934
brass nail1934
mud kicker1934
scupper1935
model1936
poule de luxe1937
pro1937
chromo1941
Tom1941
pan-pan1949
twopenny upright1958
scrubber1959
slack1959
yum-yum girl1960
Suzie Wong1962
mattress1964
jamette1965
ho1966
sex worker1971
pavement princess1976
parlour girl1979
crack whore1990
1590 R. Greene Neuer too Late i. 10 As soone as Diomede begins to court, she [sc. Cressyda] like Venetian traffique is for his penny.]
1591 R. Greene Notable Discouery of Coosenage f. 9v These traffickes (these common trulles I meane) walke abroad.
1608 T. Dekker Belman of London sig. H2v The whore is then called the Traffique.
6. regional. Worthless or insignificant stuff; rubbish, trash; (as a count noun) a small or insignificant item. Also in extended use: worthless or disreputable people; rabble. Cf. trade n. 16a. Now rare (Scottish in later use). Sc. National Dict. (at Traffeck n. & v.) records this sense as still in use in Shetland in 1972.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > importance > unimportance > [noun] > that which is unimportant > worthless
hawc1000
turdc1275
fille1297
dusta1300
lead1303
skitc1330
naught1340
vanityc1340
wrakea1350
rushc1350
dirt1357
fly's wing1377
goose-wing1377
fartc1390
chaff?a1400
nutshella1400
shalec1400
yardc1400
wrack1472
pelfrya1529
trasha1529
dreg1531
trish-trash1542
alchemy1547
beggary?1548
rubbish1548
pelfa1555
chip1556
stark naught1562
paltry?1566
rubbish1566
riff-raff1570
bran1574
baggage1579
nihil1579
trush-trash1582
stubblea1591
tartar1590
garbage1592
bag of winda1599
a cracked or slit groat1600
kitchen stuff1600
tilta1603
nothing?1608
bauble1609
countera1616
a pair of Yorkshire sleeves in a goldsmith's shop1620
buttermilk1630
dross1632
paltrement1641
cattle1643
bagatelle1647
nothingness1652
brimborion1653
stuff1670
flap-dragon1700
mud1706
caput mortuuma1711
snuff1778
twaddle1786
powder-post1790
traffic1828
junk1836
duffer1852
shice1859
punk1869
hogwash1870
cagmag1875
shit1890
tosh1892
tripe1895
dreck1905
schlock1906
cannon fodder1917
shite1928
skunk1929
crut1937
chickenshit1938
crud1943
Mickey Mouse1958
gick1959
garbo1978
turd1978
pants1994
1828 W. Carr Dial. Craven (ed. 2) Traffick, lumber, trash. ‘There wor a deal of oud traffick to sell’... Rabble, low, rascally people, the canaille.
1869 J. C. Atkinson Peacock's Gloss. Dial. Hundred of Lonsdale Traffic, (1) lumber, rubbish. (2) Rabble, low, rascally people.
1899 E. W. Prevost Dickinson's Gloss. Words & Phrases Cumberland (new ed.) 244/2 Traffic, lumber, useless things.
1934 John o' Groat Jrnl. 2 Feb. He cam' til a shop 'at they get a' 'at trifikes for bicycles.
II. Senses relating to the passage of vehicles, people, information, etc., to and fro along a route.
7.
a. The passage of vehicles, vessels, etc., to and fro along a route; the flow or movement of (motor) vehicles along a road, railway trains along a railway line, vessels along a canal, river, or sea route, etc. Also less commonly: the passage of people, animals, etc., to and fro along a route.Sometimes difficult to distinguish from sense 7b.When used with reference to air travel, frequently prefixed by air; see air traffic n. at air n.1 Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > [noun] > travelling to and fro > of people or vehicles
trade1597
traffic1735
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun]
vehiculation1628
traffic1735
1735 J. Kirby Suffolk Traveller Ded. sig. A2 At first I only propos'd to my self..to Survey the Roads of the most considerable Traffic issuing from Ipswich, Bury St. Edmund's and other considerable Towns in the County.
1767 Proposal for removing Godalming Turnpike Considered 11 To support the foregoing Argument for removing the Gate, drawn from the Increase of Traffic upon the Road South of Godalming.
1832 H. Martineau Weal & Woe ix He sauntered along the pier, around which there was no busy traffic.
1886 C. E. Pascoe London of To-day (ed. 3) xxvi. 239 The traffic of omnibuses, cabs, carriages, and carts at this point is greater and more confusing than in any other part of London.
1935 C. G. Burge Compl. Bk. Aviation 136/1 The cheaper way at intermediate towns or where traffic is light, is to assemble the passengers at a central point, and deal with them at the airport.
1974 J. A. Foster in G. P. Howard Airport Econ. Planning 5 The data to be collected should not only cover the physical facilities of the airport, but should also indicate the degree of utilization, the volume and composition of traffic, [etc.].
1983 Belle (Austral.) July 131/2 You may need to replace the carpet on the bottom stair or two if it takes a lot of traffic.
2012 N. N. Taleb Antifragile v. xviii. 274 If you have 90,000 cars for one hour, then 110,000 cars for another hour, traffic would be much slower than if you had 100,000 cars for two hours.
b. The vehicles, etc., moving to and fro along a route, considered collectively.Often denoting a relatively high concentration of stationary or slow-moving vehicles constituting an obstruction to movement.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > [noun] > vehicles passing to and fro
traffic1876
1876 Manch. Guardian 1 Dec. 6/5 Chapel-street (crowded by coal carts and other heavy traffic).
1911 E. H. Hodgkinson Tyranny of Speed viii. 107 He should hear the traffic coming behind him.
1982 S. Spender China Diary 104 There was only one line of traffic in each direction.
2018 USA Today (Nexis) 26 Oct. 1 a Los Angelenos spent an average of 102 hours stuck in traffic last year.
c. Sport (originally U.S.). Competitors in a race, or players in a team game, who are crowded or bunched together on the course, field, etc., considered collectively; spec. a concentration of defensive players constituting an obstruction to an offensive play by the opposing team.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > [noun] > racer > collectively
traffic1948
1948 Charleston (W. Va.) Daily Mail 10 Mar. (Final ed.) ii. 2/7 Pat Baker, a great football player, is another regular and husky enough to make his presence felt, especially in the tight traffic around the basket.
1977 Time 16 May 42/3 Jockey Jean Cruguet drove him deftly through tight traffic, then settled into a rousing back-stretch struggle with For the Moment.
1987 Kart & Superkart Oct. 21/1 Off the line it was Bogan, Blair and Yeates who got the jump on pole man Wall, slow away and caught up in the traffic.
2018 Lawrence (Kansas) Jrnl.-World 7 Mar. 1 c Coleman watched the smooth 9-year-old finish a play in traffic during a game at Roberts Park Community Center.
8.
a. The quantity of goods, or number of passengers, carried by a transportation service over a particular period; the business or revenue generated from this. Also as a count noun: a particular category or kind of freight so transported, or the business or revenue generated from this.In early use chiefly in the context of railway transportation.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > [noun] > conveyance by rail or train > quantity or number carried by train
trainload1819
traffic1832
trainful1850
carloading1947
1832 Minutes of Evid. before Lords Comm. Bill for making Railway London to Birmingham 180 in Parl. Papers 1831–2 (H.L. 181) CCCXI. 1 Coach Traffic..£246,916 16s. 0d.
1883 Pall Mall Gaz. 30 Nov. 5/2 It is obviously advisable that all the railways should adopt the same course, otherwise comparisons of traffic will become even more misleading than they are now.
1908 Railway Times 8 Feb. 150/1 What we call the coaching traffic is practically all the traffic carried by passenger trains.
1975 Interstate Commerce Comm. Rep. (U.S. Govt. Printing Office) 116 208 Messick transported 70,000, 98,000, 30,000, 139,025, and 93,417 pounds of traffic to Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma, respectively.
1987 M. R. Bonavia Nationalisation Brit. Transport x. 95 The statements listed the traffics for which each form of transport was considered to be ‘specially suitable and efficient’.
2017 N. K. Taneja Airline Industry iii. 40 In less than ten years the traffic transported by the new LCCs had more than doubled the traffic transported by the existing incumbent carriers in domestic markets.
b. Chiefly in plural. A statement of the business or revenue of a transportation service over a particular period; (also) the business or revenue itself. Now rare.Short for traffic return n., traffic receipt n. at Compounds 2.Chiefly in the context of railway transportation.
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1849 Express 1 Mar. 4/1 The half-year's traffics shows [sic] a small but progressive increase.
1885 Pall Mall Gaz. 21 Nov. 5/2 Traffics are still decreasing, and this fact is all the more discouraging from the fact that the comparison is with decreased traffics.
1905 Westm. Gaz. 28 Sept. 9/1 Satisfaction is again expressed with this week's batch of Home Railway traffics.
1953 Daily Mail 9 Feb. 2/5 To avoid giving stockholders nasty shocks, the weekly traffics are being converted at the more realistic Chilean remittance rate.
c. Chiefly in plural. A rate or fixed charge payable for transportation of a certain quantity of a particular category or kind of freight. Now rare and historical.Probably short for traffic rate n. (a) at Compounds 2.Chiefly in the context of railway transportation.
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society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > [noun] > carriage of goods, etc.
portage1423
carriage1425
portage money1552
porterage1611
port1615
carrying cost1846
traffic1887
society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > [noun] > carriage of goods, etc. > in wheeled vehicle > by rail > types of
mileage1837
terminal1867
commodity rate1883
traffic1887
1887 Boston Daily Advertiser 22 Sept. 1/3 When the local traffics are made to conform with the letter of the law..they will be unreasonable.
1899 Daily News 14 Mar. 9/1 The Grand Trunk Railway unconditionally withdrew the local traffics of January 6th, and agreed for the present to revert to former rates.
1988 M. J. Freeman & D. H. Aldcroft Transport Victorian Brit. Introd. 25 Some railway managers went so far as to claim that the volume traffics of the import/export business were vital to supporting the rates that prevailed on home goods.
9. The messages, signals, data, etc., passing over a telecommunications link or across a computer or information network; the flow or quantity of such messages, signals, data, etc.internet traffic, message traffic, web traffic, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > telecommunication > [noun] > volume of transmissions
traffic1860
message traffic1881
1860 National Telegr. Co.: Prospectus 2 Together securing to the National Telegraph Company advantages in the capacity to produce traffic, and profit 100 per cent. over any of the competing companies now existing.
1889 Telephone 15 Oct. 476/2 A Pacific Cable... The line..would find traffic enough to pay a fair interest on the investment.
1922 W. F. Friedman in Bull. U.S. Signal Office Signal Corps 1 Oct. 15 In modern military operations, a considerable volume of traffic is available for interception by the enemy.
1984 J. Dunlop & D. G. Smith Telecommunications Engin. x. 298 The amount of telephone traffic passing through a particular exchange depends on several factors.
1986 Daily Tel. 21 Nov. 16 The construction of digital telecommunications ‘highways’, using hair-thin fibre optic cables capable of simultaneously carrying voice and data traffic.
2008 Personal Computer World Apr. 156/2 Once a call has been initiated, traffic is sent peer-to-peer between the two endpoint devices, rather than through an exchange.
10. Usually with capital initial. The division of an organization responsible for the management of traffic.Usually short for traffic department, traffic division, etc.; cf. traffic department n. at Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > [noun] > travelling to and fro > of people or vehicles > time of most intense > traffic management
traffic1898
1898 Times 22 Feb. 13/5 In America..what with us is a single department is split into ‘traffic’ and ‘operation’.
1983 ‘D. Shannon’ Exploit of Death (1984) iii. 49 He called down to Traffic—they would have the records of what went on in all the beats in Central Division.
2013 V. McDermid Cross & Burn xxxiii. 228 We should ask Traffic how you could find out where the camera blind spots are.
11.
a. Cell Biology. The molecules, ions, etc., moving across a cell membrane, between cells, or to a particular location within a cell. Also: the movement or transportation of such molecules, ions, etc. Frequently with distinguishing word. Cf. traffic v. 7b.
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1940 R. W. Gerard Unresting Cells ix. 244 Cell size could not increase very far without jamming the metabolism, for the surface always constitutes a bottle-neck to chemical traffic.
1960 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 46 998 Considerations analogous to those given in the foregoing to the selective intake of materials by the cell from its environment would, of course, apply to traffic in the reverse direction, i.e., the selective extrusion of products from cells.
1991 M. G. Farquhar in C. J. Steer & J. A. Hanover Intracellular Trafficking Proteins xiii. 431 It [sc. the Golgi complex]..must sort all this protein traffic and direct it to its correct intracellular or cell surface destination.
2017 @clathrin 7 June in twitter.com (accessed 11 Nov. 2019) Postdoc position in my lab. Great cell biology project looking at membrane traffic, cell migration and cancer.
b. Physiology. The movement or circulation of leucocytes or other mobile cells within and between organs and tissues of the body. Cf. traffic v. 7a.
ΚΠ
1960 A. A. Moscona in Proc. 18th Symp. Soc. Study Devel. & Growth 49 There is a continuous two-way cellular traffic across these bridges and exchange of cells by aggregates, which may be contributory to the sorting-out and grouping effects to be mentioned later.
1971 Transplantation Proc. 3 923/1 The traffic of cells from the bone marrow via the thymus to lymph nodes has been demonstrated.
2011 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) B. 366 3397/2 Leucocyte traffic in the blood is needed for immune surveillance of the body.

Phrases

P1. (as much as) the traffic will bear (or stand) and variants: (as much as) the market will permit; (as much as) is economically viable. Also figurative.Originally in the context of railway transportation: see sense 8a.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > trading conditions > [phrase] > as much as trade will bear
(as much as) the traffic will bear (or stand)1867
1867 Royal Comm. Railways: Minutes of Evid. 1865–6 733/1 in Parl. Papers (Cd. 3844-I) XXXVIII. 127 They [sc. railway companies] quote you a rate without reference to the items of which it is composed, and entirely without reference to their Acts of Parliament, what they think, as the phrase is, the traffic will bear. I have said there ‘what they can get out of it’.
1888 Open Court 25 Oct. 1280/2 The bridge between the original producer and the final consumer may be long or short, and the person who carries the ‘projuice’ over it may be an extortioner, but..he cannot get any more than the traffic will bear.
1931 L. Steffens Autobiogr. v. ii. 853 His wage-earners had their rents raised to all the traffic would bear.
1936 L. C. Douglas White Banners vii. 155 We've had all the worry about you that the traffic will stand.
1982 T. Fitzgibbon With Love i. v. 32 The small neighbourhood shops were..willing to give credit up to a pound, but no more. They knew to a penny what the traffic would bear.
2007 Daily Mail (Nexis) 30 May The old rule of commerce is that a seller may charge as much as the traffic will bear.
P2. Originally and chiefly U.S. to stop (also halt) traffic and variants: (of a person or thing) to attract attention; to be particularly remarkable, attractive, or impressive. Cf. traffic stopper n., traffic-stopping adj.In quot. 1907 apparently with literal reference.
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1907 Sun (Baltimore) 19 July 11/8 His smile halts traffic... The police rounded up a dozen peddlers who help to congest the New York entrance to the Brooklyn Bridge... ‘This fellow is the worst of the lot; his queer grin makes people stop to look at him.’]
1927 H. C. Witwer Classics in Slang 12 Blanche is a cutey, which stops traffic every time she goes downtown for a walk.
1934 Daily News (N.Y.) 5 Mar. 38/3 A typical town outfit of his is single breasted gray mixture suit,..white pocket handkerchief, and black shoes. Nothing to stop traffic with, but smart.
2000 Village Voice (N.Y.) 18 Jan. 107/2 You see that ass on her? Talk about stopping traffic.
P3. Originally U.S. go (and) play in (the) traffic: used as an expression of (usually impatient or contemptuous) dismissal.
ΚΠ
1953 R. Llewellyn Flame for Doubting Thomas xxxi. 292 Alice,..would you please sit down, get drunk, get lost, go play in the traffic or sompn? You're spoilin' a good party.
1995 M. Amis Information (2008) 66 Go elsewhere, Marco. Go and play in the traffic. I'm trying to work.
1996 Observer 25 Aug. (Review section) 10/7 ‘I hate them [sc. chips], they're big and fat and ugly.’ ‘Tush, child,’ I chided her. ‘Go and play in traffic.’
2009 Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre, Pa.) (Nexis) 1 Apr. My Ma always told me, ‘Ah, go play in traffic.’

Compounds

C1.
a. As a modifier.
(a) With the sense ‘of or relating to the commercial transportation of goods or commodities, or to trade or commerce more generally’ (see sense 2). Now rare.
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1590 R. Greene tr. O. Rinaldi Royal Exchange Ep. Ded. sig. iii Merchaunts wyth theyr freendes and traffique fellowes.
1659 F. Howgill Mistery Babylon 38 And thus, Reader, I have led thee through many things, from the rise of the Whore, and through the most of her merchants, and through the most of her traffique merchants, of divers orders and ranks; but I find them all to trade with nothing but Inchantments and Sorceries.
1737 W. Whiston tr. Josephus Antiq. Jews ix. i. in tr. Josephus Genuine Wks. 274 He joined with him in the building of ships that were to sail to Pontus, and the traffick-cities of Thrace.
1898 G. Meredith Odes French Hist. 46 Their traffic instincts hooded their live wits To issues.
1979 Eng. Hist. Rev. 94 855 For the Merchants Adventurers their ancient traffic route through Antwerp continued to present a means of access to their major cloth-market in central Europe.
(b) With the sense ‘of or relating to the flow or movement of vehicles, people, information, etc., to and fro along a route, or to the vehicles, people, information, etc., moving to and fro’ (see branch II.), as in traffic congestion, traffic flow, traffic noise, traffic stream, etc.Recorded earliest in traffic return n. at Compounds 2 (?1832).
ΚΠ
?1832 P. Lecount (title) General results of the traffic returns, &c. between London and Birmingham for one year.
1850 Railway Rec. 2 Mar. 154/3 The question before the meeting was not the traffic value of the line between Askerne and York.
1886 T. Hardy Mayor of Casterbridge ix, in Graphic 23 Jan. 103/1 They..entered..by the back way or traffic entrance.
1922 Amer. Mag. Dec. 165/2 The promptness with which the traffic stream is stopped.
1930 Act 20 & 21 Geo. V c. 43 §62 The Minister may..vary the provisions.., either by altering the limits of any existing traffic area or by increasing or reducing the number of traffic areas.
1940 R. S. Lambert Ariel & all his Quality vi. 146 Broadcasting House..is responsible for a big inward and outward traffic flow; yet there is nowhere to park a car.
1971 ‘G. Black’ Time for Pirates vii. 112 I..paused to listen, hearing nothing but traffic noises.
1981 H. R. F. Keating Go West, Inspector Ghote xiii. 155 The monster car, slipping easily from one traffic stream to another.
2006 Courier-Mail (Brisbane) 22 Feb. 10/5 Schools have been urged to stagger their start times to avoid traffic congestion.
(c) With the sense ‘occurring in the flow of vehicles, etc., to and fro along a route; involving or regarding vehicles, etc., moving to and fro’ (see branch II.), as in traffic accident, traffic death, traffic safety, etc.
ΚΠ
1868 Dover Express & E. Kent Intelligencer 4 Dec. 2/6 It [sc. the Board of Trade] has only just now given us returns of the traffic accidents, &c., for the year 1867.
1936 Sci. News Let. 20 June 399/1 Better highway construction..is one very tangible and constructive way traffic deaths and accidents can be decreased.
1957 Sat. Evening Post 21 Sept. 120/1 Traffic fatalities have brought demands for effective driver training.
1991 APWA Reporter Nov. 8/3 STV would be the design basis for streets lit primarily for the purpose of improving traffic safety.
2011 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 2 Jan. (Front section) 14/5 A decade ago..no one predicted that cellphones and text messaging would lead to traffic accidents caused by distracted drivers.
b. With participles, verbal nouns, and agent nouns, forming compounds in which traffic (chiefly in senses of branch II.) expresses the object of the underlying verb, as in traffic management, traffic manager, traffic monitoring, traffic-reducing, traffic reporting, etc. See also traffic calming n. at Compounds 2, traffic controller n., traffic engineering n., traffic stopper n., traffic-stopping adj., traffic taker n. at Compounds 2.Recorded earliest in traffic taker n. (1837).
ΚΠ
1837 Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock & Ayr Railway Bill: Minutes of Evid. 110 in Sessional Papers House of Lords (H.L. 146.1) XVIII. 1 I furnished them regularly with the Duplicates of the Traffic-takers.
1857 Dublin Univ. Mag. Oct. 449/2 The traffic management of the Irish railways.
1862 A. Helps Organization Daily Life 30 A skilful traffic-manager has been suffered to be too despotic in matters of traffic.
1901 Academy 22 June 540/1 One sight amazes him..the effect produced when the traffic-regulating policeman raises his hand.
1969 Jrnl. Inst. Navigation 22 285 Traffic routing..may be thought to introduce a new situation.
1992 Police June 99/3 The unattended radar or red-light camera could easily have the single lens reflex camera replaced by a video camera, allowing real-time traffic monitoring from a central location.
2002 Vanity Fair Apr. 380 Saperstein conceived the idea for a new kind of traffic-reporting service while he was stuck in a bumper-to-bumper jam on a Baltimore expressway.
2006 New Yorker 13 Nov. 44/2 And numerous allies in city government whom the staff lobbies to enact bike-friendly legislation and other traffic-reducing measures.
c. With the sense ‘by traffic; with traffic’ (chiefly in senses of branch II.), as in traffic-choked, traffic-congested, traffic-filled, etc. See also traffic-jammed adj. at Compounds 2.With past participles.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [adjective] > traffic-jam
traffic-choked1838
traffic-jammed1907
snarled1976
traffic1997
1838 D. Page Suicide, & Other Poems 53 A long caravan Of traffic-laden camels.
1864 Sheffield Daily Tel. 8 Dec. To open up new roads through the traffic-choked city.
1959 P. Bull I know Face ix. 164 I arrived at dusk in Casablanca and was driven at breakneck speed to Marrakesh along a traffic-crammed road, stiff with the results of accidents.
1971 A. Burgess Inn of Sixth Happiness iii. 28 Before she could protest, she was..borne at top speed through the traffic-filled streets of Kobe.
2000 Equipm. Today Nov. 10/4 Today's traffic-congested streets require machines with smaller footprints to take up less space or close fewer lanes.
C2. See also traffic light n.
traffic analysis n. (a) the analysis of the flow of traffic over a transport or communication link, network, etc.; (b) Cryptography the obtaining of information through analysis of patterns of communication without the decryption of individual messages.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > code, cipher > decoding, deciphering > [noun] > analysis of transmission
traffic analysis1937
1874 Freeman's Jrnl. (Dublin) 9 Feb. 7/2 The traffic analysis shows an increase of money, under every head, amounting in the aggregate to £17,671.
1937 Hist. Communications Intelligence in U.S. (Naval Cryptologic Veterans Assoc.) (1982) 29 Information is obtained from communications by..methods short of cryptanalysis, i.e., traffic analysis.
1956 H. H. Goode et al. in Proc. Highway Res. Board 35 548/2 The results of the present paper demonstrate further the feasibility of the development of the computer model as a powerful tool for traffic analysis.
2016 Cyber Def. Rev. 1 99 Widely used for underground communication, The Onion Router (Tor) is free software designed to protect the privacy of its users by obscuring traffic analysis, greatly complicating network surveillance.
traffic analyst n. a person who carries out traffic analysis (in either sense).
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the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > code, cipher > decoding, deciphering > [noun] > one who decodes > transmission patterns
traffic analyst1919
1919 Electric Railway Jrnl. 12 July 75/1 A few of the points the traffic analyst looks for are: 1. Fitting the Service to the Traffic... 2. More Efficient Routing [etc.].
1979 W. J. Holmes Double-edged Secrets iii. 18 Traffic intelligence summaries were produced each day by two traffic analysts.
2007 X. Hong & J. Kong in Y. Xiao Security Distributed, Grid, Mobile, & Pervasive Computing viii. 162 Simple encryption of routing information can stop less sophisticated eavesdroppers, but not traffic analysts.
traffic artery n. a route along which much traffic moves or is conveyed; (in later use chiefly) spec. a main or arterial road.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > road > [noun] > main or major road
great road1614
high road1620
main road1741
highway1837
traffic artery1845
trunk road1848
main-way1862
arterial road1886
primary roada1903
route1912
arterial1920
major road1930
spine road1961
1845 Woolmer's Exeter & Plymouth Gaz. 27 Dec. Sinking other questions, such as the false route it takes, its alienation from the true traffic artery of the county,..the line was thrust out of Parliament, and is resisted by the county.
1969 New Scientist 13 Mar. 560/1 These additional costs of assimilating a traffic artery into an existing urban area are themselves a massive community burden.
2019 Baltimore Sun (Nexis) 12 July (First ed.) a2 Crews were expected to resume repairs that have paralyzed the intersection of two major traffic arteries since Monday.
traffic block n. now chiefly South Asian a stoppage of traffic, a traffic jam; cf. block n. 19a.In early use with reference to rail traffic; cf. sense 8a.
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1872 Week's News 5 Oct. 1264/1 Complaints from ordinary protests against delays of an hour or two, or of chronic traffic blocks, have passed to an endeavour to stimulate the chief officers of the companies to a sense of their responsibilities..in the ordinary working of the lines.
1904 Daily Chron. 17 Feb. 7/2 Traffic blocks are almost unknown.
2018 Hindustan Times (Nexis) 7 July (Pune ed.) The roads along the Mahabaleshwar-Panchgani route experienced traffic blocks due to overflowing of water and logging.
traffic board n. (a) a sign giving information or instructions to road users, a road sign; (b) an official body responsible for the regulation and management of traffic.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > road sign
traffic board1870
traffic sign1908
1870 Evening Jrnl. (Adelaide) 26 Aug. Some mischievous vagabond pulled up one of the gateposts and traffic-board.
1885 Brisbane Courier 1 Oct. 5/4 The proposed amended schedule of fares forwarded to the association by the Traffic Board.
2001 Chicago Tribune (Electronic ed.) 4 May 2 c/1 City transportation officials said they are updating the messages on the electronic traffic boards more frequently to inform motorists of changes.
2001 Patriot Ledger (Quincy, Mass.) (Nexis) 10 Aug. It [sc. speeding] is a regular topic that comes before the traffic board.
traffic calming n. [after German Verkehrsberuhigung (1976 or earlier)] the deliberate slowing or restriction of road traffic, esp. through residential areas, by means such as narrowing roads, installing speed bumps, or limiting use of some thoroughfares to certain vehicles (such as bicycles or public transport); frequently as a modifier.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control
traffic control1885
split-phase1895
traffic engineering1908
traffic calming1987
1987 Abstr. European Conf. Laboratoire Théorie des Mutations Urbaines de l'Inst. Français d'Urbanisme 29 We also have very limited research on how traffic calming does affect house prices, rents and retailing in such areas.
1988 Independent 19 Dec. 17/3 The introduction of the ‘traffic-calming’ techniques now widely practised on the Continent.
2019 Southern Star (Brisbane) (Nexis) 20 June 5 17 Brisbane suburbs received more than $1 million for projects like traffic calming, intersection upgrades, minor and major roadworks and road resurfacing projects.
traffic camera n. a camera (in later use typically a video camera) used to monitor road traffic.
ΚΠ
1939 Washington Post 12 Aug. 1/4 Pictures from a new traffic camera..showed the tag numbers of the speeding automobiles.
1977 Listener 23 June 809/3 An uneventful march from Speakers' Corner to a rally in Trafalgar Square. No one who took part that day was ever out of sight of one or more of the scores of so-called traffic cameras that blanket central London and, on these occasions, are connected to the Operations Room [at Scotland Yard].
2019 Daily Press (Newport News, Va.) (Nexis) 31 Oct. 1 The intersection at Todds Lane and Whealton is not monitored by traffic cameras.
traffic circle n. chiefly North American and South African a junction of several roads consisting of a central (usually circular) island around which traffic moves in one direction; = rotary n. 3.roundabout is the usual term in British and Irish English for a junction of this kind; see roundabout n. 8 and the note at that sense.North American traffic circles are typically larger than junctions of the type found in Europe, and are much less common. From the end of the 20th cent. onwards, smaller junctions of the type common in Europe have been introduced in North America; these are generally referred to as modern roundabouts (see modern roundabout n. at modern adj. and n. Compounds 2).
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > junction of roads, paths, or tracks > [noun] > types of road junction > roundabout
circus1898
rond-point1903
rotonda1908
traffic circle1914
roundabout1926
rotary1940
gyratory1983
modern roundabout1987
1914 N.Y. Times 6 Sept. vi. 8/5 Vehicles coming east through Fifty-seventh Street will bear to the right and swing around into the traffic circle which has the isle of safety for its centre.
1970 Rand Daily Mail (Johannesburg) 28 Feb. 7/5 When South Africans say ‘traffic circle’ for the Englishman's ‘roundabout’, they give precision to the language.
2019 Reading (Pa.) Eagle (Nexis) 12 July Truck traffic was being diverted at the intersection of Route 73 and at the traffic circle of Moselem Springs Road.
traffic cone n. chiefly British and Irish English a small movable cone-shaped marker, now typically made from orange plastic, used to separate off or close sections of a road as a means of temporary traffic control; = cone n.1 12.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > cone or bollard
bollard1925
traffic cone1949
cone1953
1949 Kenosha (Wisconsin) Evening News 28 Jan. (Home ed.) 5/1 The street department has purchased 12 rubber traffic cones for testing in marking areas under repair or being painted.
2019 South Wales Echo (Nexis) 11 July 3 He hit the traffic cone, which had been knocked into the road by a passing car.
traffic-conscious adj. aware of the flow or movement of road vehicles, and of associated issues such as safety, regulation, congestion, etc.; characterized by such awareness.
ΚΠ
1927 Manitoba Free Press 10 Sept. 34/6 Officials of the Canadian Good Roads association agree..that all car drivers must become ‘traffic conscious’. That is, they must realize that the question of the safety of the highways, in the final analysis, is altogether in their own hands.
1979 G. N. Knight Indexing xiii. 176 An entry such as ‘London, its happiness before the invention of Coaches and Chairs’ induces a wry smile in our traffic-conscious age.
2014 Yorks. Evening Post (Nexis) 7 Mar. Traffic-conscious pupils are getting behind the handlebars of their own bikes and riding to school.
traffic consciousness n. awareness of the flow or movement of road vehicles, and of associated issues such as safety, regulation, congestion, etc.
ΚΠ
1925 Nashville Tennessean 18 Oct. (Sports, Financial, Real Estate, Classified section) 8/5 The entire nation is awakening to a new traffic consciousness. Antiquated ideas in regulation are giving way to more systematic and logical methods.
2013 @indranil01 26 Dec. in twitter.com (accessed 18 May 2020) @thekiranbedi can you initiate a drive to improve traffic consciousness in Delhi? It would reduce corruption, congestion and accidents.
traffic constable n. now chiefly Indian English and Philippine English a police officer or other official engaged in the direction and regulation of road traffic.
ΚΠ
1867 Manch. Guardian 6 June 3/4 (table) Sergeants and traffic constables.
1930 Daily Express 8 Sept. 9/7 A traffic constable commandeered a passing car and gave chase.
2019 Times of India (Nexis) 8 July Mysuru city police commissioner KT Balakrishna said that they did not have the numbers to post traffic constables near schools.
traffic control n. the regulation of the movement of traffic, usually through the use of signals or direct commands; a service responsible for this.In aeronautical contexts, usually short for air traffic control n. at air n.1 Compounds 2.In quot. 1884 in the collocation vehicular traffic control.In quot. 1885 with reference to rail traffic; cf. sense 8a.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control
traffic control1885
split-phase1895
traffic engineering1908
traffic calming1987
1884 Brisbane Courier 24 Sept. 5/5 (heading) Vehicular traffic control.]
1885 S. Austral. Reg. (Adelaide) 24 July 5/1 The system of traffic control at present in force should be superseded by one better calculated to avert friction.
1938 Encycl. Brit. Bk. of Year 33/1 Increasing volume of traffic forced the development of airport traffic control systems... Experiments in traffic control began almost 20 years ago (using signal lights).
1962 E. Snow Other Side of River (1963) lxxi. 548 How many policemen do you have in New York? Most of ours are for traffic control.
2019 Campbell River (Brit. Columbia) Mirror (Nexis) 1 Oct. Watch for utility work at Garfield Road on Highway 19 northbound... The shoulder will be closed and watch for traffic control.
traffic controller n. a person who or device which is responsible for regulating the movement or flow of traffic.In aeronautical contexts, usually short for air traffic controller n. at air n.1 Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > person who controls traffic
traffic controller1902
1902 Daily News (Perth, Austral.) 5 Mar. Any person who, in the opinion of the traffic controller, shall be causing an obstruction in the street, shall be guilty of an offence against the by-laws.
1930 Engineering 25 July 106/3 Highfield automatic traffic controller... At present the three-light system appears to be most widely favoured.
1977 G. Markstein Chance Awakening lxvii. 209 ‘Some big shot?’ asked the RAF squadron leader... ‘Guess so,’ said the traffic controller.
2006 Courier-Mail (Brisbane) 27 Apr. 3/1 A senior policewoman..is under investigation for allegedly ignoring a traffic controller's directions.
traffic cop n. colloquial a police officer engaged in the direction and regulation of road traffic.
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society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > [noun] > policeman > traffic policeman
traffic officer1852
traffic cop1905
highway patrol1909
speed cop1924
1905 Sydney Sportsman 1 Mar. 1/2 If the traffic cops were coached up a little regarding the rules of the road,..the driving public would be exceedingly grateful.
1961 B. Crump Hang on a Minute Mate 23 They..returned to the truck to find a traffic cop standing by it.
2018 Univ. Chicago Law Rev. 85 1881 The costs of enforcing the fire hydrant law, such as traffic cops and towing.
traffic court n. originally U.S. a court of law with jurisdiction over motoring offences.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > administration of justice > judicial body, assembly, or court > [noun] > courts with other specific jurisdictions
marshalseaa1400
oyer and terminer1469
High Commission1581
jail-delivery1612
Court of (the) Verge1647
palace court1685
Court of Claims1691
Industrial Court1852
brewster sessions1883
traffic court1896
family court1917
1896 Daily Picayune (New Orleans) 2 Oct. 6/1 This they supposed constituted a violation of the interstate laws, and on that ground it was made amenable to that high traffic court.
1972 R. Hood Sentencing Motoring Offender v. 105 The remainder [sc. motoring offences] would be dealt with at Traffic Courts.
2019 Gulf News (Nexis) 11 July Dubai Traffic Court ordered the driver be deported after serving his jail term.
traffic density n. the density of the flow of traffic on a particular route; the concentration of vehicles, etc., in a particular location or region; (as a count noun) an example of this.In early use chiefly in the context of railway transportation; cf. sense 8a.In quot. 1892 in the collocation passenger traffic density.
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1892 Boston Daily Globe 14 Sept. 9/3 The passenger traffic density (passengers carried one mile per mile of road) of Boston & Albany and Old Colony compare as follows.]
1898 Boston Daily Globe 13 Oct. 9/4 These statistics show results never before approached on any western line, and not equalled by many eastern lines of much greater traffic density.
1991 Highways & Transportation Sept. (verso front cover) (advt.) Blacktop roads..can be progressively strengthened to meet changing traffic densities.
2019 Times of India 14 July Monorail projects are better suited to cities like Visakhapatnam because it has much lower traffic density when compared to cities like Hyderabad and Delhi.
traffic department n. the division of an organization responsible for the management of traffic; cf. sense 10.In quot. 1838 in the collocation travelling and traffic department.
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1838 Standard 6 Nov. (advt.) A superintendent over the travelling and traffic department.]
1839 Essex Standard 27 Sept. The management of the traffic department gives great satisfaction to the public.
2008 T. Vanderbilt Traffic (2009) vii. 186 ‘Children at Play’ signs have not been shown to reduce speeds or accidents, and most traffic departments will not put them up.
traffic engineer n. (a) a person engaged in the management of the flow of vehicular traffic as a profession, spec. one who designs and plans roads; (b) a person whose profession is to plan and manage the flow of messages, data, etc., passing over a telecommunications link or through a computer or information network.
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1853 Cork Examiner 14 Oct. Mr. G. E. Ilbery, traffic engineer, and Mr. Millar, chief engineer, were also present.
1903 Amer. Telephone Jrnl. 3 Oct. 222/2 Malcolm C. Rorty, traffic engineer in the main office of the American Telephone Company.
1952 Hartford Courant 8 Apr. 17/6 The traffic engineers at the company's headquarters..forwarded the traffic requirements for the new toll switchboard to another group.
1978 Jrnl. Royal Soc. Arts 126 425/1 Increasing the throughput of vehicles on an existing highway..is a field in which traffic engineers have notched up considerable successes as the demand has increased.
2004 M. Stafford Signaling & Switching for Packet Teleph. xiv. 206 There is a well-established methodology that tells traffic engineers when and where to add capacity.
2019 Daily Republic (Mitchell, S. Dakota) (Nexis) 11 July We've worked with our traffic engineers and identified the need for it, and we are moving forward with the traffic signal project.
traffic engineering n. (a) management of the flow of messages, data, etc., passing over a telecommunications link or through a computer or information network; (b) management of the flow of vehicular traffic, esp. by means of the design and planning of roads.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control
traffic control1885
split-phase1895
traffic engineering1908
traffic calming1987
1908 Salt Lake (Utah) Herald 3 Feb. 8/4 Traffic Engineering: Exchange or Local, Toll Lines, Tariffs.
1914 Amer. Econ. Rev. 4 200 It treats of..traffic engineering matters, in great detail, including an estimate of present and future traffic by..direction of travel, and time of day.
2009 A. Nucci & K. Papagiannaki Design, Measurem. & Managem. Large-scale IP Networks xiv. 290 From an ISP's perspective, traffic classification has always been a critical activity for several important management tasks, such as traffic engineering.
2019 Star. (S. Afr.) (Nexis) 6 Sept. 6 Traffic engineering has..improved the road traffic markings and road traffic signage.
traffic-free adj. (of a road, area, etc.) free from traffic, without traffic, devoid of traffic.
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1912 J. R. Freeman On Proposed Use Portion Hetch Hetchy Valleys for Water Supply San Francisco 160i/1 The shorter and more traffic-free crossing between Dumbarton and Ravenswood.
1979 R. Perry Bishop's Pawn viii. 137 Dieter was taken..towards Zurich along..relatively traffic-free roads.
2005 Independent 8 Aug. 19/2 Rome is hot in the summer, the traffic-free piazza an ideal place to kick back.
traffic indicator n. (a) a device, instrument, etc., which provides information on traffic (now typically on the concentration of road traffic); (b) a signalling device fitted to a motor vehicle for indicating an intended change in direction; = indicator n. 3g.Early signalling devices had various designs, such as that later known as the ‘trafficator’ (see trafficator n.), but later ones typically take the form of flashing lights.In quot. 1885 in the collocation railway traffic indicator.In quot. 1895 in figurative context, with reference to the behaviour of passengers on a train.
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1885 Sunderland Daily Echo 25 Feb. 4/4 (heading) An electrical railway traffic indicator.]
1895 Railroad Gaz. 4 Jan. 11/3 There is an automatic, double acting, self-adjusting, and self-imposed traffic indicator in daily operation on the Alley Elevated of Chicago.
1907 Western Gaz. 20 Dec. 11/5 Traffic indicator for road vehicles.
1938 Derby Evening Tel. 8 Oct. 5/5 A kind-hearted Derby man makes a point of switching off traffic indicators which careless motorists fail to turn off when leaving their cars parked.
1970 Financial Times 11 May (Plessey Times section) 1/1 A thousand traffic indicators displaying speed and lane-closure information.
2006 T. Rowe Another Day, Another Dog xvi. 234 My first ever car was old enough to have the little illuminated arm-type exterior traffic indicators.
traffic island n. (a) an area where there is relatively little rail traffic (obsolete rare); (b) a raised or marked area in a road to provide a safe stopping point for crossing pedestrians and to direct the flow of traffic (cf. safety island n. at safety n. Compounds 3, refuge n. 4c).With sense (a), cf. main sense 8a.Sense (b) is uncommon in North America, where safety island is the more usual term.
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society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > road > parts of road > [noun] > portion for safety of pedestrians
street island1853
island1869
refuge1869
street refuge1879
traffic island1887
safety island1893
safety isle1902
safety zone1915
1887 Economist 29 Oct. 1370/1 In the United States, outside of the kind of ‘traffic islands’ formed by the older-settled New England States, the proportion of local to ‘through’ traffic is extremely small.
1911 Manitoba Free Press 25 Nov. (Real Estate section) 13/5 (headline) Traffic islands in city's streets.
1982 ‘C. Aird’ Last Respects x. 101 The driver negotiated the traffic islands with impatience.
2019 Northern Echo (Nexis) 22 Oct. Durham County Council added a new traffic island and dropped kerbs..to help pedestrians cross the road.
traffic jam n. originally U.S. a situation in which the flow of road traffic is obstructed (e.g. by an accident or roadworks), causing a build-up of stationary or slow-moving vehicles; a stoppage of traffic caused by this; the vehicles caught in such a stoppage, viewed collectively; also figurative.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic jam
stop1625
stoppage1727
lock1834
block1861
pinch point1868
tie-up1889
traffic jam1891
traffic snarl1899
traffic snarl1933
traffic snarl-up1947
thrombosis1959
snarl-up1960
back-up1962
tailback1975
gridlock1980
1891 Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago) 17 Dec. 8/1 The five robbers had noticed that Creighton generally drove through Mather street to avoid the traffic jams on the large thoroughfares.
1917 I. Crump Boys' Bk. Policemen iii. 55 He plunged into the traffic jam at the next street.
1957 Economist 21 Dec. 1038/1 The Home Universities conference could hardly have chosen a more important subject for discussion last week than the traffic jam of students which piles up every summer when school leavers put in their bids for university places.
2019 Times of India 29 Apr. (Nexis) (Goa section) Nearly 50 passengers..missed their flights out of Goa on Saturday evening, after getting stuck in a massive traffic jam between Cortalim and Agasaim.
traffic-jammed adj. originally U.S. (of a road, city, etc.) full of stationary or slow-moving vehicles; characterized by traffic jams; (of a vehicle or its occupants) obstructed by traffic, caught in traffic; also figurative.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [adjective] > traffic-jam
traffic-choked1838
traffic-jammed1907
snarled1976
traffic1997
1907 Philadelphia Inquirer 15 Sept. 2 a/5 A non-engine stop run through the heart of London's traffic-jammed thoroughfares.
1964 Economist 1 Aug. 476/1 They sit traffic-jammed in the intractable streets.
1983 Listener 1 Sept. 16/1 I was still sitting in my traffic-jammed car five minutes later.
2019 N.Y. Times (Internat. Ed.) (Nexis) 16 Oct. The more lanes you add to a traffic-jammed highway, the more cars will inevitably arrive to fill them.
traffic lane n. (a) a division of a roadway marked off by painted lines and intended for a single line of vehicles travelling in the same direction; = lane n.1 2d; (b) an air or sea route designated as a set course for shipping or aircraft in order to avoid collisions; cf. lane n.1 2a.
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society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > road > parts of road > [noun] > part where vehicles run > part wide enough for one vehicle
traffic lane1903
lane1926
1903 Gympie Times & Mary River Mining Gaz. (Queensland, Austral.) 11 June A petition was tabled..asking that the traffic lane connecting the Horseshoe Bend ends of Norman and Musgrave streets be kept open.
1905 R. Kipling Actions & Reactions (1909) 150 You could not hoist the necessary N.U.C. lights on approaching a traffic-lane because your electrics had short-circuited.
1972 Daily Tel. 5 May 3 The Government is taking powers to prosecute masters of British ships caught travelling the wrong way in traffic lanes through the Straits of Dover.
2019 Kirkintilloch (E. Dunbartonshire, Scotland) Herald 10 July Two lane closures on the bridge and its approaches are being upgraded, leaving only one traffic lane each way until completion.
traffic mile n. (a) a unit of measurement of the freight and passengers carried by a transportation service in a given period (now rare); (b) a unit of traffic measurement representing a distance of one mile travelled by one (road) vehicle; = vehicle mile n. at vehicle n. Compounds 3.With sense (a) chiefly in the context of railway transportation; cf. main sense 8a.
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1860 Jrnl. Statist. Soc. 23 230 (table) Working expenses per Traffic mile.
1933 Los Angeles Times 16 Apr. 23/1 Last year the cost to the public per 1000 traffic miles was about $11.
1937 N.Y. Times 12 Jan. 25/4 The heavy snowstorm..kept many automobiles off the streets..and thus kept low the accident-per-traffic-mile rate.
2017 Kent & Sussex Courier (Nexis) 4 Aug. (Letters section) Most probably more traffic miles and associated fuel have been covered and consumed by a large fleet of spoil lorries than the whole of the traffic using the A21 in any year of construction.
traffic offence n. an infringement of traffic regulations by the driver of a (motor) vehicle; cf. traffic violation n.
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society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > specific offences > [noun] > offence by driver of motor vehicle
traffic offence1875
traffic violation1905
1875 Irish Times 18 June In view of the fact that 468 drivers were actually arrested for traffic offences, the penalities applied..seem to us quite insufficient.
1960 Daily Tel. 29 Jan. 23/4 A ‘ticket’ system of optional fixed fines for minor traffic offences.
2001 Bristol Evening Post (Nexis) 20 Feb. 11 If a driver is banned for any type of traffic offence, the fine is nowadays, in the majority of cases, an irritation but easily payable.
traffic officer n. (a) a person whose job it is to plan and regulate railway traffic (now rare); (b) a police officer engaged in the direction and regulation of road traffic.
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society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > [noun] > policeman > traffic policeman
traffic officer1852
traffic cop1905
highway patrol1909
speed cop1924
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > person who controls traffic > traffic police or policeman
traffic officer1852
traffic police1883
1852 Morning Post 14 Oct. 2/4 Many of the requisitionists.., and one of their traffic officers, have only recently become shareholders in this company.
1868 Manch. Times 1 Feb. 3/1 The penalties were for the most part in merely nominal amounts, unless in cases wherein the defendants had abused the traffic officers.
1915 Policeman's Monthly Oct. 5/1 Traffic officers in the center of the street are subjected to many hardships.
1930 Railway Age 16 Aug. 309/1 The traffic officers of individual lines have no confidence in each other.
2018 Post-Standard (Syracuse, N.Y.) 29 Mar. a4/5 The cameras will be tested mostly by patrol and traffic officers.
traffic pattern n. chiefly North American (a) the characteristic distribution of vehicles, persons, information, etc., on a route, network, etc.; (b) Aeronautics a standard flight path above an airport or airfield, followed after take-off and before landing by aircraft operating under visual flight rules.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > characteristic distribution
traffic pattern1930
society > travel > air or space travel > specific movements or positions of aircraft > air as medium for operation of aircraft > [noun] > route through the air > normal pattern of
traffic pattern1930
1930 N.Y. Times 1 June ix. 6 xx/3 A quarter of a century ago, when the motor vehicle was introduced into the traffic pattern.
1940 Abilene (Texas) Reporter-News 5 July 1/2 Rigid traffic patterns must be maintained in the air to avoid collisions between planes which are landing, taking-off and going through their aerial classes.
1977 Chicago Tribune 2 Oct. xi. 14/3 But the ‘island’ arrangement—placing furniture in the middle of a room (if it's large enough), thereby leaving space to walk around it—is a good way to create a traffic pattern.
2012 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 1 Nov. c5/1 This is not to say that new traffic patterns devised to steer drivers around the arena aren't creating problems.
2019 GDP: Global Data Point (Nexis) 25 May The agency says the taxiway will enhance safety by allowing new traffic patterns for the private, commercial, and glider pilots who use the airport.
traffic police n. the branch of a police force concerned with the enforcement of traffic regulations and road traffic control; (with plural agreement) members of this branch.
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society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > [noun] > branch or part of police force > specific
water1552
armed police1787
special police1804
detective force1849
traffic police1883
vice squad1905
drug squad1913
blue force1920
ghost squad1922
flying squad1927
Sweeney1936
morality squad1945
courtesy patrol1961
strike force1961
pussy posse1963
drugs squad1965
vice1967
mobile1971
uniform branch1972
uniform1978
NCIS1991
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > person who controls traffic > traffic police or policeman
traffic officer1852
traffic police1883
1883 B. V. Shaw Rep. Police Organization Europe 46 The control of Street and Traffic Police.
1959 New Statesman 3 Jan. 6/3 He also disliked anything that gave traffic police more discretion or wider powers.
2011 Times of India (Nexis) 9 Feb. The traffic police admit that drunken driving is a cause of worry on Goan roads.
traffic policeman n. a male police officer engaged in the direction and regulation of road traffic.
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1897 Daily Mail 26 Feb. 3/3 The cabmen and the private coachmen are just as emphatic in their condemnation, and the traffic policemen are on the same side.
1940 W. H. Auden Another Time 91 Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves.
2019 Times of India (Nexis) 20 June (Mumbai section) The traffic policeman is the first point of contact that motorists have with the authority.
traffic-proof adj. impervious or resistant to (the effects of) traffic; spec. (of a horse or pony) that can be ridden safely in traffic.
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the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > temperament > [adjective] > obedient or well-trained > safe in traffic
traffic-proof1931
1899 Age (Melbourne) 11 Dec. 5/6 (headline) Frere Bridge traffic proof.
1931 Devon & Exeter Gaz. 9 Jan. 4/4 (advt.) Both are Irish, up to weight, good hunters, snaffle mouths, both saddles, traffic proof.
1977 Horse & Hound 14 Jan. 40/4 (advt.) Gelding..Viceless, traffic proof.
2014 Toronto Star (Nexis) 22 Feb. t14 Metro systems are efficient and traffic-proof.
traffic-proof v. transitive to render (something) impervious or resistant to (the effects of) traffic; spec. to train (a horse or pony) to be ridden safely in traffic.
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the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > [verb (transitive)] > training horses in specific ways
manage1561
pace1595
school1608
way1639
supple1753
traffic-proof1971
1922 Highways Green Bk. (Amer. Automobile Assoc.) ii. 287 Some of the gravel roads in parts of New England have been traffic-proofed to such an extent that three thousand automobiles a day or more are carried over gravel roads that previously became intolerable under a traffic of as many hundred vehicles.
1971 Pony Mar. 347/1 A few months ago I was given the task of traffic-proofing a pony.
2011 @techsavvyed 11 June in twitter.com (accessed 14 Nov. 2019) Hopefully, I just traffic proofed my WP blog.
traffic rate n. (a) a fixed charge for transportation of a certain quantity of a particular category or kind of freight (now rare); (b) the rate at which vehicles, etc., pass to and fro along a route.In sense (a) chiefly in the context of railway transportation: see main sense 8a.
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1844 Staffs. Advertiser 12 Oct. Mr. Hall said he had been informed yesterday that the gentlemen whom he represented would give the Potteries a fair traffic rate.
1920 Fort Wayne (Indiana) Jrnl.-Gaz. 17 Oct. iii. 1/2 Over the Manhattan spans the daily traffic rate is 20,214 motor vehicles.
1958 Financial Times 1 July 5/4 The State owned railways..ignored Mr Naudé's ‘increased productivity’ stipulation by passing on the [wage] increases in the form of higher traffic rates.
2014 Jrnl. Herpetol. 48 501/2 Traffic rates were recorded with a pneumatically activated traffic counter.
traffic receipt n. now chiefly historical (in plural) the business or revenue of a transportation service over a particular period.Chiefly in the context of railway transportation: see sense 8a.
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1840 Essex Standard 31 July Eastern Counties' Railway. Comparative statement of Traffic-Receipts of the last week with those of the corresponding week, 1839.
1902 Westm. Gaz. 5 Apr. 10/1 There has been a very material decline in the traffic receipts though the mileage run has been practically the same.
2008 A. Smith Brit. Businessmen & Canad. Confederation 44 The anticipated traffic receipts did not materialize due to the drastic reductions in crossborder trade that began in 1860.
traffic return n. now chiefly historical a statement of the business or revenue of a transportation service over a particular period.Chiefly in the context of railway transportation: see sense 8a.
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?1832 P. Lecount (title) General results of the traffic returns, &c. between London and Birmingham for one year.
1912 Times 19 Dec. 16/5 Canadian Pacific Railway shares opened above parity on the satisfactory traffic return.
2011 Econ. Hist. Rev. 64 814 Contributions to joint lines set up by two or more companies where they made separate traffic returns.
traffic sign n. a sign conveying information, an instruction, or a warning to drivers of motor vehicles and other road users.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > road sign
traffic board1870
traffic sign1908
1908 Ann. Rep. Police Commissioner City N.Y. 1907 48 Iron traffic signs on heavy bases and uprights have been adopted, to be placed at locations where vehicular traffic is diverted, and to indicate to drivers the direction of traffic.
1973 J. Wainwright Devil you Don't 42 McGuire threaded the Jag. through the city streets. He obeyed every traffic sign.
2019 Cyprus Mail (Nexis) 17 Feb. Drivers are urged to be alert, drive at low speed, keep safety distances from other vehicles and comply with traffic signs.
traffic signal n. a signal used to direct or control traffic; chiefly spec. (each of) a set of lights (usually red, amber, and green) used for automatic control of road traffic, esp. at junctions and pedestrian crossings; = traffic light n. 2.Now particularly common in Indian English.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > traffic lights
traffic signal1893
traffic light1913
signal1915
light1925
robot1929
1893 Rice Lake (Wisconsin) Times 22 Dec. ‘Gee’ and ‘Haw’ meant as much to transportation then as the modern traffic signals of today.
1908 Daily Mail 26 June 4/6 (heading) Automatic Traffic Signals.
1981 ‘J. Ross’ Dark Blue & Dangerous x. 57 A traffic signal which turned red as he approached it.
2019 Legal Monitor Worldwide (Nexis) 26 June Williams was charged with..using a false marker plate, operating an unregistered motor vehicle, and failure to obey traffic signals.
traffic snarl n. colloquial (originally U.S.) a traffic jam; = traffic snarl-up n.Cf. snarl n.1 2b.In quot. 1899 in figurative context.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic jam
stop1625
stoppage1727
lock1834
block1861
pinch point1868
tie-up1889
traffic jam1891
traffic snarl1899
traffic snarl1933
traffic snarl-up1947
thrombosis1959
snarl-up1960
back-up1962
tailback1975
gridlock1980
1899 N.Y. Times 18 June 22/7 Strong and skillful men are busily at work trying to untangle bituminous traffic snarls.
1905 Boston Daily Globe 28 Mar. 4/2 Blockades have been common and the traffic snarls were many.
2005 Courier-Mail (Brisbane) 4 May 39/7 Telework offered the chance to prevent traffic snarls and ease the current skills shortage.
traffic snarl-up n. colloquial (originally U.S.) a traffic jam; = traffic snarl n.Cf. snarl-up n.
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society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic jam
stop1625
stoppage1727
lock1834
block1861
pinch point1868
tie-up1889
traffic jam1891
traffic snarl1899
traffic snarl1933
traffic snarl-up1947
thrombosis1959
snarl-up1960
back-up1962
tailback1975
gridlock1980
1947 Waterloo (Iowa) Daily Courier 2 Oct. 17/1 Drivers..may find themselves involved in a traffic snarlup which may take hours to untangle.
1976 Southern Evening Echo (Southampton) 6 Nov. 1/8 We hear complaints on all sides about traffic snarl-ups making people late for work.
2009 J. Beattiey Windblow 346 They'd travel up on the Sunday morning to avoid any traffic snarl-ups.
traffic squad n. originally U.S. a division of a police force concerned with the enforcement of traffic regulations and road traffic control.In quot. 1903 in the collocation street traffic squad.
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1903 N.Y. Times 1 Jan. 2/4 For the enforcement of these ordinances there should be a trained police squad to be known as the street traffic squad.]
1904 N.Y. Tribune 24 Sept. 16/2 While endeavoring to regulate traffic in Park Row yesterday afternoon by attempting to start a balky horse Roundsman Howard, of the traffic squad, was run into by the horse and the animal on which he was riding was killed.
2019 Toronto Star (Nexis) 25 Nov. gt1 The board approved the reinstatement of a new traffic squad on Thursday.
traffic stack n. now rare a number of aircraft circling at different altitudes around the same point while waiting for landing instructions; = stack n. 1e.
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1947 Aviation Week 15 Dec. 66/2 Long range search radar..is of great assistance in locating lost planes, checking locations of traffic stacks and supplementing GCA in emergencies.
1963 L. Deighton Horse under Water lii. 219 It's the Seville Traffic Control Zone... If it [sc. a plane] gets mixed into that traffic stack I'm not sure that I'll be able to sort it out.
traffic stopper n. someone or something that attracts attention; a particularly remarkable, attractive, or impressive person or thing. [Probably after to stop traffic at Phrases 2.]
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1919 Woodland (Calif.) Daily Democrat 20 Mar. 7/2 (advt.) These shirts are colorful..but not ‘traffic stoppers’..; simply swell for summer.
2006 A. Bibb Learning to Love 50 She was blessed with hair of the most beautiful shade of red... She was a traffic stopper.
traffic-stopping adj. that attracts attention; that is particularly remarkable, attractive, or impressive. [Probably after to stop traffic at Phrases 2.]
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1916 Fort Wayne (Indiana) Sentinel 15 July i. 4/3 He'll be able to buy some traffic-stopping neckties.
2009 E. L. Harris Mama Dearest iv. 40 She still saw herself as a traffic-stopping beauty with big doe-brown eyes and long, thick lashes.
traffic taker n. now historical a person employed to record the amount of traffic on a particular route, or to estimate the potential traffic of a proposed route, typically as a means of assessing or forecasting revenue.Chiefly in the context of railway transportation; cf. sense 8a.
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1837 Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock & Ayr Railway Bill: Minutes of Evid. 110 in Sessional Papers House of Lords (H.L. 146.1) XVIII. 1 I furnished them regularly with the Duplicates of the Traffic-takers.
1988 P. S. Bagwell Transport Revol. 1770–1985 (2003) iv. 82 These were the days of the ‘traffic takers’, employed by the promoters of new railways, to discover the potential traffic of the district through which the intended line would pass.
2010 Financial Times (Nexis) 12 Apr. 32 The Victorian traffic-takers turned out to be no more independent than Wall Street analysts of the internet age.
traffic ticket n. (a) a ticket for travel on public transportation (obsolete rare); (b) (originally and chiefly North American) an official notification of a traffic offence, issued by a police officer or other official.In sense (a) in the context of railway transportation; cf. main sense 8a.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > administration of justice > process, writ, warrant, or order > [noun] > notification > of traffic offence
traffic ticket1880
ticket1930
1880 S. Austral. Reg. (Adelaide) 25 Oct. 2/2 (advt.) Ordinary Traffic Tickets, available for any part of the Line.
1919 N.Y. Tribune 10 Oct. 19/5 Commissioner Harriss's proposed traffic ticket ordinance.
1950 J. D. MacDonald Brass Cupcake iii. 31 Every time you get into that car of yours, you'll get a traffic ticket.
2015 Toronto Star (Nexis) 6 July (Editorial section) a10 Today, if you are given a traffic ticket by a police officer in Ontario, you have the option of fighting it in court.
traffic violation n. originally and chiefly U.S. an infringement of traffic regulations by the driver of a (motor) vehicle; cf. traffic offence n.
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society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > specific offences > [noun] > offence by driver of motor vehicle
traffic offence1875
traffic violation1905
1905 N.Y. Tribune 30 Mar. 2/6 (heading) Fined for traffic violation.
2017 Reason Aug. 17/1 Folks with either no criminal conviction..or convictions only for minor offenses such as traffic violations or driving under the influence.
traffic warden n. originally and chiefly British an official employed to locate and report on infringements of parking regulations and (sometimes) other traffic regulations; cf. parking attendant n. (b) at parking n. Compounds 2.Originally, traffic warden was the official designation of a person employed in this role by the police; the term has subsequently been applied more generally to any person performing the same or similar duties.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > law enforcement > police force or the police > [noun] > officials attached to police force
searcher1834
police boy1914
traffic warden1928
police dispatcher1935
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [noun] > traffic control > person who controls traffic > traffic warden
parking attendant1927
traffic warden1928
brown bomber1953
parking warden1966
1928 Devon & Exeter Daily Gaz. 30 May 2/5 The Sub-Committee recommended that the Standing Joint Committee should sanction the engagement of twenty temporary policemen as traffic wardens during the summer.
1959 Punch 25 Feb. 274/1 Any supposed similarity of function between the police and the newly-proposed traffic wardens vanished with the official statement that the wardens ‘would help motorists to find parking space’.
2019 Leicester Mercury (Nexis) 18 July ‘When we have deliveries there is nowhere for them to park,’ she said. ‘It seems like there is an army of traffic wardens waiting to pounce.’

Derivatives

ˈtraffical adj. now somewhat rare (a) of, relating to, or of the nature of traffic; (b) regional and colloquial characterized by having traffic, crowded or busy with traffic.
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1783 Whitehall Evening-post 12–15 Apr. He added, that all Europe laughed at the constant traffical exchange of the Lord Lieutenants of that kingdom.
1872 B. Haughton Railway Amalgamation 14 The traffical necessities of the various manufacturing and commercial centres of the land.
1905 A. Warrack in Eng. Dial. Dict. VI. 215/2 This is a traffical road.
1999 V. B. Andersen in T. Alten et al. Challenges for 21st Cent. II. 470/1 A delicate and difficult traffical situation at one of the entrance areas.
2016 Roymandude 4 Oct. in twitter.com (accessed 16 July 2020) So who else was feeling this less busy less traffical day?
ˈtrafficful adj. rare characterized by having traffic, crowded or busy with traffic.
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society > travel > travel by water > [adjective] > navigable > navigated or frequented by shipping
trafficfula1628
navigated1697
a1628 F. Greville Life of Sidney (1651) ix. 107 Her traffiquefull, & navigable river.
1846 Chambers' Edinb. Jrnl. 20 June 396/2 Nothing but the hardest stone will do for the paving of this trafficful city!
2019 @Azure_Husky 11 Oct. in twitter.com (accessed 25 Oct. 2019) Throwing last things in my bags and then time for a (likely) trafficful drive to Ottawa.
ˈtraffickery n. rare underhand dealing, intrigue; an instance of this.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > lack of principle or integrity > [noun] > dishonesty > action
brokery1602
trinketing1646
adultery1753
traffickery1838
hanky-panky1841
grafting1859
shystering1860
graft1865
skulduggery1867
sharp practice1869
in and out work1888
by-practice1913
grift1914
dirty pool1973
1838 in S. T. Coleridge Lit. Remains III. 387 This indiscreet traffickery [2000 Marginalia Trafficking] with Romish wares.
1954 A. Wainhouse Hedyphagetica i. 38 Against this setting one discovers a luxurious traffickery; assignations are concluded, it's the rendez-vous of Europe's most notorious sodomists and their agents.
ˈtrafficky adj. characterized by having traffic, crowded or busy with traffic.
ΚΠ
1844 N. P. Willis in New Mirror 11 May 90/1 The head-quarters of Washington are tenanted by a piano-forte builder, and all around looks trafficky and dull.
1918 Fort Sumner (New Mexico) Rev. 19 Jan. 1/4 The cold-blooded toad my war-bag throwed in the trafficky road.
1974 J. Hersey in New Yorker 16 Dec. 54/3 He sits up very straight, and his car shoots away into the trafficky night.
2010 N.Y. Times Mag. 10 Jan. 22/1 And then there's what you're missing by skipping the office: the trafficky commute, the petroleum-based slacks.
ˈtrafficless adj. without traffic, devoid of traffic.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > street > [adjective] > devoid of traffic
trafficless1844
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > way, path, or track > road > [adjective] > frequented by travellers or traffic > not
trafficless1844
motorless1970
1844 Times 15 May 6/3 The designers of traffickless railroads.
1989 T. Parker Place called Bird i. 3 Viewed from a stance in the middle of the midday trafficless Main Street, the road to the north disappeared in a straight unbroken line off over the horizon.
2009 Post-Standard (Syracuse, N.Y.) (Nexis) 11 Aug. a4 The excitement of happy people swinging along a trafficless four-block midway.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2020; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

trafficadj.

Brit. /ˈtrafɪk/, U.S. /ˈtræfɪk/, Philippine English /ˈtrɑˌfik/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion; probably modelled on a Tagalog lexical item. Etymon: traffic n.
Etymology: < traffic n., probably after Tagalog trapik, traffic, use as adjective of trapik , traffic traffic n.
Philippine English.
Marked by slow movement of vehicles; congested.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > vehicular traffic > [adjective] > traffic-jam
traffic-choked1838
traffic-jammed1907
snarled1976
traffic1997
1997 Eng. is Asian Lang.: Proc. Conf. Manila, 1996 55 Lately, in informal Philippine English,..nouns have taken on functions as adjectives: traffic as in ‘Sorry I'm late; it was so traffic’.
2004 Jrnl. Eng. Stud. & Compar. Lit. (Univ. Philippines) 7 28 It's traffic in southbound Manila because of the pilgrimage made to Baclaran Church on this day.
2019 @davidg0411 25 Oct. in twitter.com (accessed 4 Nov. 2019) Why is it very traffic now in EDSA?
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2020; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

trafficv.

Brit. /ˈtrafɪk/, U.S. /ˈtræfɪk/
Inflections: Present participle trafficking; past tense and past participle trafficked;
Forms: 1500s trafek, 1500s traffak, 1500s traffycke, 1500s traffyke, 1500s traffyque, 1500s traficque, 1500s trafycke, 1500s–1600s traffeck, 1500s–1600s trafficke, 1500s–1600s trafficque, 1500s–1600s traffik, 1500s–1600s traffike, 1500s–1600s traffique, 1500s–1600s traficke, 1500s–1600s trafike, 1500s–1600s trafique, 1500s–1700s traffick, 1500s–1700s trafick, 1600s traffeque, 1600s– traffic; Scottish pre-1700 trafeckque, pre-1700 trafek, pre-1700 traffecq, pre-1700 traffecque, pre-1700 traffect, pre-1700 traffeic, pre-1700 traffeique, pre-1700 traffek, pre-1700 traffeque, pre-1700 traffey, pre-1700 traffich, pre-1700 traffick, pre-1700 traffickque, pre-1700 trafficque, pre-1700 traffict, pre-1700 traffiger, pre-1700 traffique, pre-1700 trafik, pre-1700 trafique, pre-1700 traphick, pre-1700 trauffique, pre-1700 trefect, pre-1700 trefek, pre-1700 treffeck, pre-1700 treffect, pre-1700 triffick, pre-1700 trifficque, pre-1700 1800s trafeque, pre-1700 1800s traffik, pre-1700 1900s– traffeck, 1800s trafeck.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French trafiquer.
Etymology: < Middle French traffiquer, trafficquer, traficquer, traphiquer, Middle French, French trafiquer to trade (1441 as traffiguer ), to have dealings with a person (a1466; 1579 with reference to illicit sexual relations), to carry out intrigues (1470), to buy or sell (goods) (1545), to undertake commercial travel on (a river) (1631) < Italian trafficare , (regional: northern) traffigare to sell (goods) (14th cent.; also frequently with negative connotations), to trade (mid 14th cent.), probably < Catalan trafegar to decant (14th cent.), further etymology uncertain, probably < an unattested post-classical Latin form *transfaecare < classical Latin trans- trans- prefix + faec- , faex dregs (see faeces n.); see note. Compare earlier traffic n.Compare Spanish trasegar to decant (1495 as trassegar ; also †trasfegar ), (reborrowed < Italian) traficar to trade (late 16th cent.), and (all in the sense ‘to trade’) Portuguese trafegar (1365 as traffegar ), traficar (1789; reborrowed < Italian), and (probably < Italian) post-classical Latin traffigare (1380), traficare (1429; 1554 in a British source). Further etymology. Besides post-classical Latin *transfaecare , other (formally and semantically less likely) etymons have also been suggested, e.g. an unattested post-classical Latin form *transfricare ( < classical Latin trans- trans- prefix + fricāre to rub: see fricative adj.). Classical Latin transfigere (see transfix v.) is not viable as an etymon on both formal and semantic grounds. Former suggestions of an Arabic etymon (compare Arabic taraffaqa to derive benefit from (something), tafrīq partition, differentiation, distribution) lack any supporting evidence; the similarity of the Romance words to these Arabic words is coincidental. For a detailed discussion of the various senses in the Romance languages and the further etymology, see Y. Malkiel ‘La etimología de español tras-[h]egar 'transvasar', italiano trafficare 'comerciar': un nuevo balance’ in Medioevo romanzo (1985) 10 305–38. Borrowing of the Italian verb from Catalan is plausible in light of the close political links e.g. between Catalonia and Sardinia in the Middle Ages and early modern period. Moreover, the Italian verb has more general senses not exclusively relating to trade, which are attested from an early date. Specific forms. The Older Scots forms in -ct are reverse spellings reflecting 15th-cent. loss of /t/ after /k/ in other words (e.g. direct v.). Specific senses. In the specific uses in cell biology (see senses 7a and 7b) respectively after traffic n. 11b and traffic n. 11a.
I. Senses relating to trading or having dealings with others.
1.
a. intransitive. To engage in trade or commerce, esp. between one country, region, or community and another; to buy and sell, or barter, goods or commodities; to trade. Also occasionally: to travel for the purpose of trade. Now rare and chiefly historical.Also (and in earliest use) in figurative contexts (in this use cf. also sense 4b).With the increasing dominance in the 20th cent. of the senses relating to illegal or illicit trade (see senses 2b and 2c), this sense and others relating to lawful or acceptable trade generally declined (cf. senses 1b, 5b, and 2a). However this sense is still current in the Caribbean with reference to legitimate trading between the Caribbean Islands and neighbouring territories in agricultural produce and household goods (see quot. 1990 and cf. trafficker n. 1a).
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > [verb (intransitive)]
cheapc1000
chaffer1340
to make (a) market1340
merchandisec1384
merchantc1400
occupy1525
traffic1537
trade1557
to make a (also one's) mart1562
commerce1587
converse1598
negotiate1601
mart1602
intertraffic1603
nundinate1623
deala1627
market1636
correspond1682
to make (out) one's market1714
1537 tr. Protestation Moste Redoubted Kynge Englande sig. A.vv Romayne byshops haue nothynge to doo with englysshe people, the one dothe not trafycke with thother, at the leste, thoughe they wyll haue to doo with vs, yet we wolle none of their marchaundyse, none of theyr stuffe.
1540 King Henry VIII in State Papers Henry VIII (1849) VIII. 227 The Inglishe merchantes that trafique in your contrys off Spayne.
1585 T. Washington tr. N. de Nicolay Nauigations Turkie iv. xi. f. 123v Vnto the ports..come to traffick, the merchants of Cambaia.
a1623 H. Spelman Relation Virginia in J. Smith Wks. (1884) p. civ Powhatan..caried our English to their storehouse where their corne was to traffique with them.
1632 Guillim's Display of Heraldrie (ed. 2) iv. xiv. 339 The Seas, at that time so sorely infested with pirats, that the Merchants ships could not trafficke in safety.
1699 S. Tomlyns Absolute Necessity Spiritual Husb. 89 Men will not traffick and trade with Christ,..they will not be Christ's Chapmen and his Customers.
1773 J. Hawkesworth Acct. Voy. Southern Hemisphere II. i. ix. 93 They trafficked with us for cocoa-nuts and other fruit.
1825 T. Roscoe tr. G. B. Giraldi in Ital. Novelists II. 165 There was a Greek merchant..who having trafficked in various parts of Italy, at length settled in Mantua.
1893 T. B. Strange Gunner Jingo's Jubilee i. xxvii. 292 The Kooloomen and the Tartars from Thibet..come to traffic at the foot of the Bara Lacha Pass.
1971 A. M. Gibson Chickasaws vi. 144 They hunted and gathered furs and trafficked with the Quapaws and other tribes for their pelts.
1990 M. Lagro & D. Plotkin Agric. Traders of St. Vincent & Grenadines ii. 11 The number of traders appears to have declined as older traders who had been trafficking for many years have dropped out.
b. intransitive. With in. To practise or engage in a specified kind of trade or commercial activity. Also occasionally (and in earliest use) transitive, with the trade or activity as object. Also in extended use. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > business affairs > [verb (intransitive)]
traffic1560
transact1584
1560 Proclam. Elizabeth I Peace Fraunce & Scotl. 24 Mar. (single sheet) (verso) They shall..permit them to traffique al trades of marchaundise within this realme.
1588 R. Parke tr. J. G. de Mendoza Hist. Kingdome of China 70 Whosoeuer will go from one prouince to another within the said kingdome, to traficke in buying and selling, shall giue suerties to returne.
1609 W. M. Man in Moone sig. E You haue long traffickt in a wicked and vnlawfull trade.
1661 A. Brome Songs & Other Poems 161 Judge then (my friend) how far I am unfit To traffick with thee, in the trade of Wit, How Banck-rupt I am grown of all commerce.
1794 S. T. Coleridge Coll. Lett. (1956) I. 128 Tongue, that traffick'd in the Trade of Praise!
1915 Nashville Tennessean 10 May b5/5 Violating the right of neutrals, to traffic in legitimate trade.
1968 T. H. Watkins San Francisco in Color i. vi. 14 The girls trafficking in this trade [i.e. prostitution] represented as cosmopolitan a spectrum as you might find anywhere.
2.
a.
(a) transitive. To trade or deal in (goods or a commodity); to buy and sell, to barter; to transport (goods or a commodity), esp. from one country, region, or community to another, for the purpose of trade. Also intransitive: to deal in a commodity. Now rare and chiefly historical.In early use also in †to traffic (in) merchandise: to engage in trade or commerce.
ΚΠ
1550 T. Nicolls tr. Thucydides Hist. Peloponnesian War v. v. f. cxxxv Durynge all the same somer the Athenyanes and the Peloponesians vsed and traffiqued merchandises togiders.
1557 T. North tr. A. de Guevara Diall Princes iii. xxvi. f. 196/2 Yu shuldest forsake ye warre, & traffique marchaundise.
1601 R. Dolman tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. III. 314 The barke..is sold very deere to such strangers as trafficke therein.
1629 E. W. tr. L. Richeome Pilgrime of Loreto 305 We be not Pilgrims as you are,..our estate is to trafique in merchandise.
1641 H. Robinson England's Safety 1 Their trade consists onely in fishing on our Coast, manufactures and trafficking forraine commodities to and fro.
1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc World Surveyed i. ix. 26 They make stuffs so fine they look like white linnen, which they traffick in, and sell at dear rates.
1740 J. Fransham World in Miniature I. 208 The River is often crowded with Ships from various Nations; the Merchandizes imported, are traffick'd to Poland, Lithuania, &c.
1773 D. Henry Hist. Acct. Voy. Eng. Navigators III. 215 Beads were trafficked this day for every thing.
1819 Port Folio Oct. 348 The coasting trade..consists of domestic produce, viz. salt, pork, beef, flour, corn, butter, cheese, lard, whiskey, &c. which are trafficked for cider, apples, fish, &c.
1874 Biogr. Encycl. Pennsylvania 19th Cent. 64/1 He trafficked in horses and mules, and..added to his prosperity.
1975 G. D. Ramsay City of London ii. 41 The merchants trafficking in cloths to Antwerp were in mid-sixteenth century the effective masters of London.
2014 R. McLaughlin Rom. Empire & Indian Ocean iii. 28 Arabia was a leading participant in the ancient economy because it produced and trafficked large amounts of valuable incense.
(b) intransitive. Of a commodity: to be traded; to be transported from one place or country to another for the purpose of trade. rare. Now historical.
ΚΠ
1826 in R. A. Humphreys Brit. Consular Rep. Trade & Politics Lat. Amer. 1824–6 (1940) vi. 205 Foreign merchandizes trafficking without the documents prescribed..are subject to the penalty of confiscation.
1844 Caledonian Mercury 13 May The amount of goods trafficking to and from Edinburgh, within the last two years, has been 110,000 tons.
2007 R. Kluger Seizing Destiny i. 46 The requirement that all goods trafficking to and from the British colonies be carried on British-flag vessels.
b. intransitive. With in. To trade in or procure human beings for the purpose of slavery or exploitation; (in later use esp.) to relocate people forcibly or illegally from one country or region to another, typically for coercion into prostitution, forced labour, or other forms of exploitation. Later also transitive with person as object (frequently in passive).Cf. slightly earlier trafficker n. 1c.Originally perhaps simply a contextual use of sense 2a, but from the early 20th cent. emerging as a distinct sense.
ΚΠ
1817 Trewman's Exeter Flying-post 6 Mar. It is made a felony, subject to 14 years' transportation, for any person to be trafficking in Slaves.
1877 tr. in Italy. No. 1: Corr. Introd. & Employm. Ital. Children 2 in Parl. Papers (C. 1764) LXXXVIII. 515 The countries where the persons who traffic in these children take refuge, and carry on almost with impunity their shameful industry.
1933 G. M. Hall Prostitution ii. 82 There is a diminution of the number of women trafficked into South America..though there is still a large number of women..who have practised prostitution in those countries.
1977 Chicago Tribune 16 May 1/1 A nationwide homosexual ring..has been trafficking in young boys, sending them across the nation to serve clients.
1997 Irish Times 26 May 3/1 Dublin is now one of the main destinations offered by an international network of gangs trafficking in people.
2016 J. A. Reid et al. in J. A. Reid Human Trafficking v. 79 The victim was trafficked by her father and exploited by other men when she was a preadolescent.
c. transitive. To trade or deal illegally or illicitly in (something); (now esp.) to transport (officially controlled or stolen goods or substances) from one country or region to another in the course of illegal trade. Also (and earliest) intransitive, chiefly with in.Apparently originally used with reference to illicit trading in prisons, and gaining currency in the second half of the 20th cent.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > illegal or immoral trading > trade in (goods) illegally or immorally [verb (transitive)]
to make merchandy ofa1425
to make (a or one's) merchandise1531
mart1589
trade1737
traffic1896
1896 Islander (Friday Harbor, Washington) 21 May He has made open charges to the board of directors, that employes of the prison are trafficking in the drug.
1915 Rep. City N.Y. Dept. Correction 1914 i. 61 Some were trafficking to their own immoral gain, and to the detriment of the welfare of the unfortunate inmates.
1933 Chicago Defender 28 Jan. 1/1 Former Chicago policeman..to begin a two-year sentence for trafficking narcotics.
1948 Times 23 Dec. 3/3 Members of an international smuggling ring engaged in trafficking large quantities of goods over the German-Dutch border have been arrested.
1988 O. Eby Long Dry Season iii. xxiii. 206 He had hoped to confront the Mzee with evidence that Otieno was trafficking in poached game animals.
2013 Small Arms Surv.: Everyday Dangers iv. 93 Western Balkans, the Russian Federation, and Eastern Europe are key sources of firearms trafficked into the EU.
3.
a. intransitive. figurative, in figurative contexts, and in extended use, typically with negative connotations. Chiefly with in. To offer as a commodity or deal in something which is not generally regarded as an object of trade, esp. something abstract, as love, death, etc.; also (and earliest) transitive with the thing dealt in as object.
ΚΠ
1558 W. Whittingham in C. Goodman How Superior Powers 6 Trie by the touchstone..who cehoppe [sic] and change [the wordes of God]..making marchandise therof to traffique according to mans pleasure.
1590 R. Greene Neuer too Late ii. sig. E4v The gaine is griefe to those that traffique loue.
1637 J. Shirley Lady of Pleasure iii. sig. E2v Your Ladiship I conceive Doth trafficke in flesh marchandize.
1761 E. Crane Poet. Misc. 71 What peace can riches give unto a wretch That traffics with the blood of innocence?
1779 D. Williams tr. Voltaire Treat. Toleration iii. 15 Leo X...trafficked in indulgencies, as men do in any articles of merchandize, in a public market.
1855 J. S. C. Abbott Hist. Napoleon I. iv. 80 Beautiful and dissolute females..trafficking in their charms.
1917 tr. in Times 17 Aug. 5/1 His alliance with the nation's enemies, trafficking the honour of the nation..with foreigners.
2012 K. Russell Redback lxix. 211 It was..strictly part of a business enterprise. Stoval trafficked in death on a scale bigger than anyone had ever imagined.
b. intransitive. With in. More generally: to concern or occupy oneself with something, esp. something considered dishonourable or unworthy; to have to do with, to engage in.
ΚΠ
1656 Disc. Auxiliary Beauty 180 Nor have we [women] lesse liberty granted to traffique in all truths both humane and divine.
c1721 Marquis of Tullibardine Let. 24 Jan. in 10th Rep. Royal Comm. Hist. MSS (1885) App. i. 126 On no pretence I trafick in any tainting politique.
1764 C. Churchill Poems II. 131 Bids..[the daring Muse] frequent the haunts of humble swains, Nor dare to traffick in ambitious strains.
1820 La Belle Assemblée Jan. 9/2 A court is generally filled with flatterers and servile sycophants, who traffic in lies and scandal.
1906 Daily Mail 5 July 6/5 They lisp compliments from babyhood, they traffic in superlatives from their youth up.
1996 T. C. Bambara Deep Sighting & Rescue Missions 255 My mama—not one to traffic in metaphors..being a very scientific woman.
2010 A. Matz Satire in Age of Realism i. 1 Fiction that trafficked in the grimy, destitute, ugly quarters of contemporary life.
c. intransitive. With on, upon. To make use of something for one's own ends or profit, esp. in a way considered unfair or underhand; to take advantage of, exploit. Now rare.Cf. to trade on —— at trade v. Phrasal verbs 2, to trade upon —— at trade v. Phrasal verbs 2.
ΚΠ
1793 Parl. Reg. Ireland XIII. 47 There are men indeed who traffic on the wrongs and sufferings of the nation, who turn the grievances of the people to their own immediate profit.
1833 Caledonian Mercury 14 Mar. There were some persons who throve and trafficked upon the ills of their country.
1881 Scotsman 10 May 6/2 Nothing was so cruel as to traffic on the credulity of one's fellow-countrymen.
1946 Austin (Texas) Statesman 4 Apr. 5/3 Insidious institutions of the devil, which work by stealth and traffic on the weakness of human nature.
1958 W. Barrett Irrational Man i. i. 6 The movement..actually trafficked upon the guilt philosophers felt at not being scientists.
4. To deal or communicate with, without implication of trade. Cf. traffic n. 3b.
a.
(a) intransitive. Originally and in early use chiefly Scottish. To engage in clandestine dealings or communication with another, esp. with sinister or malicious intent; to conspire; to collude. Formerly also: †to scheme for or against something; to plot to do something (obsolete).In the late 16th and 17th cent. often with reference to Roman Catholic plotting against the state or established religion; cf. trafficking n. 1a, trafficking adj. 1, and trafficker n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > intention > planning > plotting > plot [verb (intransitive)] > conspire
collude1525
traffic1567
condescend1569
complot1579
confederate1622
collogue1646
trinket1647
trinkle1672
cabal1680
1567 in J. H. Burton Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1877) 1st Ser. I. 569 Williame Bischop of Dunblane..nocht declarand the maner how he maid his finance and trafficquand with the Papis Nunce and utheris his ministeris.
1613 R. Dallington Aphorismes Ciuill & Militarie xlv. 61 This pretence was without all colour, to them which truly considered his former courses, and vnderstood how he had trafficked with the Emperour long before to that purpose.
1615 P. Simson Short Compend Hist. First Ten Persecutions II. iv. 148 They shoulde bee discouered, and made knowne to Princes, against whose estate they trafficke with most treasonable attemptes.
a1639 J. Spottiswood Hist. Church Scotl. (1655) vi. 420 He had trafficked with strangers for subversion of Religion or the alteration of the State.
1673 Bp. G. Burnet Vindic. Church & State Scotl. iii. 226 Some..are perpetually trafficking to make all who differ from them odious, who catch up every Tattle they hear that may defame them.
1791 Titiad i. 11 The kind good-natur'd dame; Who, tho' she's very free and civil, Has never traffick'd with the Devil.
1828 W. Scott Fair Maid of Perth xii in Chron. Canongate 2nd Ser. III. 333 Let no man go with us whose truth is not known to thee. None in especial who has trafficked with the Duke of Albany!
1858 C. M. Yonge Cameos xlvi in Monthly Packet May 458 Jeanne discovered that he was trafficking with her enemies, and tampering with her friends.
1941 Stud. in Philol. 38 231 Still darker was his guilt if he trafficked with ‘the spirits that know all mortal consequences’.
2012 J. G. Hershberg Marigold xii. 511 Do let slip that he, too, was trafficking with the enemy.
(b) transitive. Scottish. To arrange or contrive (an outcome), with implication of private or secret negotiation or underhand dealings; to plot (something). Obsolete. rare.Recorded only in the writings of William Drummond; cf. trafficking n. 1b.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > speech > agreement > make an agreement with [verb (transitive)] > negotiate
setc900
treat1357
merchantc1400
tract1508
article1526
capitulate1567
articulate1602
to stand with ——1616
huckster1642
traffica1649
transact1654
negotiate1720
renegotiate1787
a1649 W. Drummond Hist. Scotl. (1655) 28 He trafficked the return of King Iames, and he being come, he plotted the overthrow of Duke Mordock.
a1649 W. Drummond Hist. Scotl. (1655) 207 He directed..his late paranymph, and the Lord Maxwell to France. Whilst they traffique this Marriage, many false accusations..are intended one after another at the Court.
b. intransitive. With with. Neutrally, without implication of secrecy or sinister intent: to have dealings or communication with someone; to converse with someone. Obsolete (chiefly Scottish regional (north-eastern) in later use).
ΚΠ
1574 E. Hellowes tr. A. de Guevara Familiar Epist. 180 It is a great trauaile to trafficke or deale wyth furious, impatient, and men of euill suffering: For that they are incomportable to serue: and of conuersation very perillous.
1632 H. More tr. G. Piatti Happines Relig. State ii. xiii. 267 The communication which we may haue by our minde and spirit, wherewith we traffick with God and his holie Angels.
1696 J. Cockburn Jacob's Vow i. i. 11 Not..Monkish or Cloistered Persons, but..such as were Married, and did commonly Traffique and entertain Commerce with the World.
1871 W. Alexander Johnny Gibb xiv. 105 Didna ye traffike neen wi' common fowk the day?
1882 Jamieson's Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. (new ed.) Trafeque, to hold familiar intercourse. Banffs.
II. Senses relating to travel (originally for the purpose of trade).
5.
a. transitive. To visit or frequent (a place or region) for the purpose of trade or commerce; to travel over (a sea) in the course of trade. Obsolete.Cf. trafficked adj. 2.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > [verb (transitive)] > frequent for purpose of trade
traffic1547
trade1554
walk1608
1547 in Acts Privy Council (1890) II. 130 The Kynges Majestes subjectes trafeking the seas.
1592 J. Eliot Survay France 84 The towne..is greatly traffiqued with merchants from Tholouse, Bourdeaux, Quercy and Rouergue..for it is very plentifull.
1612 W. Shute tr. T. de Fougasses Gen. Hist. Venice i. 164 This place neere to Constantinople..was much frequented by Genoa Merchants trafficking the Ponticke Seas.
1667 R. Fage Cosmography 106 Lybia, famous for Mines of Gold..for which it is very much traffiqued by all the European Nations.
b. intransitive. To travel to, into, or from a place or region for the purpose of trade. Also with adverb of direction. Now rare and chiefly historical.
ΚΠ
1568 T. Hacket tr. A. Thevet New Found Worlde lvi. f. 89v Since that time they trafike and trade to the Ilande of Moluques.
1676 A. Sammes Britannia Antiqua Illustrata 20 Its Scituation and Ports, lying exactly in the middle between Tyre and the Streights, whither the Phœnicians Trafficked.
1716 Royal Proclam. 18 Oct. in London Gaz. No. 5480/1 Their Factors..should..Traffick, or Adventure into or from the..East-Indies.
1827 J. Ritson Mem. Celts or Gauls 209 (note) The drink of the Celtiberians was made of honey,..but they bought wine also of the merchants that trafficked thither.
1879 Jrnl. Soc. Arts 7 Feb. 225/1 Cosmas had been originally a merchant trafficking to the East.
2003 J. Della Croce Veneto 32 Another theory traces the bean's entry into the region through the Venetian merchants who trafficked to the Americas.
6.
a. intransitive. To travel; to make one's way; to pass, proceed. Usually with adverb, adverbial phrase, or prepositional phrase.Esp. in the context of movement to and fro or coming and going.rare before the 19th cent., probably gaining currency from that period onwards due to the influence of traffic n. 7a.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > [verb (intransitive)] > travel to and fro
traffic1569
shuttle1823
oscillate1865
1569 E. Elviden Closet of Counsells f. 78v Titans ramping race perseuers through the skyes..And daily trafficks to the West and turnes to East agayne.
1669 R. Fleming Fulfilling Script. 158 Such a party is at this day, encompassing the earth, and trafficking up, and down there.
1851 Fife Herald 24 Apr. The numerous passengers that traffic hither and thither.
1877 E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. (at cited word) Our nurse used to scold us when children for trafficking up and down stairs.
1917 W. Irwin Lat. at War iv. 106 The trail was lively all the way with soldiers, who trafficked back and forth, singing or calling out boyish jokes.
1931 R. Church High Summer i. v. 94 Excitement, speculation, and..pure physical feeling, these forces trafficked about her aching brain.
2002 L. D. Estleman Something Borrowed, Something Black (2003) x. 67 Officers in uniform, lawyerly types carrying briefcases, and apparent bums..trafficked about, jabbering.
b. transitive. To travel along, pass over, or use (a road or route). Later also: to travel or pass through (an area). Also intransitive with on or upon. Frequently in passive and with preceding modifying adverb. Cf. trafficked adj. 4.rare before the 19th cent., probably gaining currency from that period onwards due to the influence of traffic n. 7a.In quots. 1624 and 1662 in figurative context, with reference to a metaphorical way or path.
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society > travel > [verb (transitive)] > go to and fro over or along
traverse1487
traffic1624
navigate1844
1624 J. Norden Imitation of David 273 All carnall men traffike this way, a very pleasant way, wherein yet many haue walked for a time.
1662 F. Kirkman Wits xxiii. 142 Since ye must traffique sometimes this slippery way, take sure hold.
a1825 R. Forby Vocab. E. Anglia (1830) (at cited word) The new road will soon be trafficked.
1850 F. S. Merryweather Glimmerings in Dark 52 Some would venture to traffic them in the day, but few would risk such perilous thoroughfares by night.
1865 Glasgow Herald 14 Nov. 3/4 The narrow road which goes past the doors is very much trafficked upon, and is always in a filthy state.
1935 Interior Dept.: Hearings before Subcomm. Appropriations (U.S. House of Representatives, 74th Congr., 1st Sess.) 473 To build roads..and then allow the large bus companies to traffic on them with large trucks.
1976 N.Y. Times 31 Dec. c15/1 This front area is..hectically trafficked by waiters dashing from the front bar to the back room.
1999 A. Gayot Best of Hawaii (ed. 4) 81/2 In a hub trafficked by visitors, this no-frills hangout is a popular and welcome site for drinking.
2006 P. Askegren Afterimage xii. 223 The road that led out of Sunnydale was heavily trafficked with cars and vans, pickup trucks and SUVs.
7.
a. intransitive. Physiology. Of a leucocyte or other mobile cell: to travel or circulate within or between organs or tissues of the body. Cf. traffic n. 11b.
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1968 R. A. Good in R. A. Good et al. Immunologic Deficiency Dis. in Man 166 Labeled thymus lymphocytes traffic to nodes, spleen and certain lymphoid tissue related to gut, but do not normally traffic back to the thymus.
2003 A. M. Stevens et al. in M. Sticherling & E. Christophers Treatm. Autoimmune Disorders 105 When cells traffic between fetus and mother during pregnancy and persist, maternal and fetal microchimerism results.
b. transitive. Cell Biology. To move or transport (a molecule, ion, etc.) across a cell membrane, between cells, or to a particular location within a cell. Also occasionally intransitive. Cf. traffic n. 11a.
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1985 Proc. 7th Internat. Conf. Proteins of Iron Metabolism 144 The endosomes, containing apotransferrin associated with receptor are trafficked to the peri-Golgi region of the cell.
1996 Progress Brain Res. 109 156/2 The various receptor fragments can be stably inserted into lipid bilayers and properly trafficked to the cell surface.
2012 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 109 5559/1 Up to one-third of all proteins synthesized by eukaryotic cells are initially trafficked through the specialized environment of the endoplasmic reticulum.

Phrasal verbs

With adverbs in specialized senses. to traffic away
transitive. To dispose of (goods or a commodity) by trade or bartering; (frequently and in later use chiefly figurative) to give up or relinquish (something) in pursuit of financial reward or other advantage; (hence) to throw away recklessly, to squander, to waste. Now rare.
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1622 J. Mabbe tr. M. Alemán Rogue ii. 314 Your cleane white linnen..was very good chaffer, to trafficke away with strangers.
1666 J. Caryl Expos. 38th–42nd Chaps. Job xlii. 907 What kind of Merchants, what kind of Exchange-men are they, that will traffick or truck away their souls, for the profits or pleasures of sin.
1755 Monitor 20 Dec. 171 They trafficked away the peace of Europe.
1772 H. Maffett tr. Sallust Catiline & Jugurthine Wars 171 Vieing with one another in their prizes of cattle and slaves, and openly trafficking them away with the merchants.
1879 19th Cent. No. 32. 673 The honour of the proud house of Este was being basely trafficked away.
1914 Manch. Courier 1 Apr. 10/4 Base degenerates, trafficking their souls away for greed of gold and selling their honour for so much cash down!
1934 Nashville Tennessean 12 Apr. 11/8 Those out of power are said to claim that their party..has been traded and trafficked away.
to traffic off
transitive. Chiefly U.S. To dispose of (goods) by trade; to barter or exchange (a commodity) for something else. Also in extended use. Now rare.Cf. to trade off 1 at trade v. Phrasal verbs 1.
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1823 New-Eng. Galaxy 25 Apr. These goods were articles, the residue of his stock, which he was trafficking off.
1830 Boston Masonic Mirror 10 July 379/3 Your love of truth and honor can be trafficked off for even the hope of office.
1855 T. J. Hutchinson Narr. Niger, Tshadda, & Binuë Explor. ii. 24 Captain Hawkins made the first English venture for a cargo of the living commodity, which he trafficked off at Hispaniola for produce of that island.
1922 Sat. Spectator (Terre Haute, Indiana) 11 Nov. 10/2 This place is a nuisance because of the poor, distressed horse flesh that is trafficked off here.
1961 Rhinelander (Wisconsin) Daily News 5 Dec. 9/1 We cheer them [sc. the players] this year..and we'll probably hoot them next year if they're trafficked off to the despised Bears of Chicago or some other rivalling outfit.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2020; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1505adj.1997v.1537
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