Need another word that means the same as “crossover”? Find 4 synonyms and 30 related words for “crossover” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Crossover” are: crossover voter, crossing, crosswalk, crossing over
Crossover as a Noun
Definitions of "Crossover" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “crossover” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- The process of achieving success in a different field or style, especially in popular music.
- Relating to or denoting trials of medical treatment in which experimental subjects and control groups are exchanged after a set period.
- The appropriation of a new style (especially in popular music) by combining elements of different genres in order to appeal to a wider audience.
- A point or place of crossing from one side to the other.
- A path (often marked) where something (as a street or railroad) can be crossed to get from one side to the other.
- The interchange of sections between pairing homologous chromosomes during the prophase of meiosis.
- A voter who is registered as a member of one political party but who votes in the primary of another party.
Synonyms of "Crossover" as a noun (4 Words)
crossing | The action of crossing something. We were thirty yards from the crossing when a man stepped off the pavement. |
crossing over | A junction where one street or road crosses another. |
crossover voter | The appropriation of a new style (especially in popular music) by combining elements of different genres in order to appeal to a wider audience. |
crosswalk | A path (often marked) where something (as a street or railroad) can be crossed to get from one side to the other. |
Usage Examples of "Crossover" as a noun
- A jazz-classical crossover album.
- A jazz–classical crossover album.
- A crossover study.
Associations of "Crossover" (30 Words)
asphalt | Surface with asphalt. Asphalt the driveway. |
avenue | A thoroughfare running at right angles to the streets in a city laid out on a grid pattern. An avenue of limes. |
boulevard | A wide street in a town or city, typically one lined with trees. Sunset Boulevard. |
bridge | Make a bridge across. A covered walkway bridged the gardens. |
cable | A television system that transmits over cables. He caught a glimpse of the mast a cable or two downwind. |
crisscross | Mark with or consist of a pattern of crossed lines. Crisscross the sheet of paper. |
cross | A cross as an emblem of Christianity. The system is a cross between a monorail and a conventional railway. |
crossing | The action of crossing something. A border crossing. |
crossroad | A junction where one street or road crosses another. |
crosswalk | A path (often marked) where something (as a street or railroad) can be crossed to get from one side to the other. |
drawbridge | A bridge, especially one over a castle’s moat, which is hinged at one end so that it may be raised to prevent people crossing or to allow vessels to pass under it. There was a rattle of chains as the drawbridge was lowered. |
driveway | A short road leading from a public road to a house or other building. One of the suspects backed a vehicle into the driveway. |
fordable | Shallow enough to be crossed by walking or riding on an animal or in a vehicle. The stream was fordable. |
intersect | (of two or more things) pass or lie across each other. The area is intersected only by minor roads. |
intersection | A junction where one street or road crosses another. The set of red hats is the intersection of the set of hats and the set of red things. |
jaywalk | Cross or walk in the street or road unlawfully or without regard for approaching traffic. You jaywalked across a busy four lane street. |
junction | The place where two or more things come together. The junction of two roundels produces a triangular space. |
lamppost | A metal post supporting an outdoor lamp (such as a streetlight. |
overlap | A part or amount which overlaps. The curtains overlap at the centre when closed. |
overpass | Surpass. Did not its sublimity overpass a little the bounds of the ridiculous. |
path | An established line of travel or access. The missile traced a fiery path in the sky. |
pavement | A horizontal expanse of bare rock or cemented fragments. He fell and hit his head on the pavement. |
pedestrian | A person walking rather than travelling in a vehicle. Disenchantment with their pedestrian lives. |
road | The part of a road intended for vehicles especially in contrast to a verge or pavement. He had to work in a road about six feet wide. |
roadway | The part of a road intended for vehicles, in contrast to the pavement or verge. |
route | Send via a specific route. The many routes to a healthier diet will be described. |
sidewalk | Walk consisting of a paved area for pedestrians; usually beside a street or roadway. |
skyway | A covered overhead walkway between buildings. A second storey skyway links the two shops. |
street | The streets of a city viewed as a depressed environment in which there is poverty and crime and prostitution and dereliction. She tried to keep her children off the street. |
traffic | The movement of ships, trains, aircraft, or pedestrians. The government will vigorously pursue individuals who traffic in drugs. |