Need another word that means the same as “road”? Find 13 synonyms and 30 related words for “road” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Road” are: route, highway, thoroughfare, roadway, way, path, direction, course, anchorage, harbour, port, mooring, roads
Road as a Noun
Definitions of "Road" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “road” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A regular trade route for a particular commodity.
- A railroad.
- A way or means to achieve something.
- A railway track, especially as clear (or otherwise) for a train to proceed.
- A partly sheltered stretch of water near the shore in which ships can ride at anchor.
- An underground passage or gallery in a mine.
- An open way (generally public) for travel or transportation.
- A particular course or direction taken or followed.
- A series of events or a course of action that will lead to a particular outcome.
- The part of a road intended for vehicles, especially in contrast to a verge or pavement.
- A wide way leading from one place to another, especially one with a specially prepared surface which vehicles can use.
Synonyms of "Road" as a noun (13 Words)
anchorage | An anchorite’s dwelling place. The plant needs a firm anchorage. |
course | An area of land set aside and prepared for racing, golf, or another sport. He took a course in basket weaving. |
direction | Something that provides direction or advice as to a decision or course of action. He checked the direction and velocity of the wind. |
harbour | A place of refuge. A curved breakwater was built of large stones to construct a small harbour. |
highway | (chiefly in official use) a public road. A six lane highway. |
mooring | A place where a craft can be made fast. The great ship slipped her moorings and slid out into the Atlantic. |
path | An established line of travel or access. Genius usually follows a revolutionary path. |
port | A place seaport or airport where people and merchandise can enter or leave a country. The French port of Toulon. |
roads | An open way (generally public) for travel or transportation. |
roadway | A road (especially that part of a road) over which vehicles travel. |
route | An established line of travel or access. Proposals have been put forward for a new route around the south of the town. |
thoroughfare | A road or path forming a route between two places. The teeming thoroughfares of central London. |
way | A general category of things used in the expression in the way of. Get out of my way. |
Usage Examples of "Road" as a noun
- Clara had to walk in the road to avoid black plastic rubbish sacks.
- Boston Roads.
- He's well on the road to recovery.
- He had to work in a road about six feet wide.
- The Silk Road across Asia to the West.
- The shipment of freight by road.
- The low road of apathy and alienation.
- A country road.
- A road accident.
- They live at 15 Park Road.
- The road to fame.
- They waited for a clear road at Hellifield Junction.
Associations of "Road" (30 Words)
asphalt | Mixed asphalt and crushed gravel or sand used especially for paving but also for roofing. Asphalt the driveway. |
avenue | A tree-lined approach to a country house or similar building. Three possible avenues of research suggested themselves. |
boulevard | A wide street or thoroughfare. Sunset Boulevard. |
crisscross | Crossing one another in opposite directions. Wrinkles crisscrossed her face. |
cross | Draw a line or lines across mark with a cross. A right cross. |
crossing | The action of crossing something. A short ferry crossing. |
crossover | Relating to or denoting trials of medical treatment in which experimental subjects and control groups are exchanged after a set period. A jazz classical crossover album. |
crossroad | A junction where one street or road crosses another. |
crosswalk | A marked part of a road where pedestrians have right of way to cross; a pedestrian crossing. |
delineation | The action of indicating the exact position of a border or boundary. The artist s exquisite delineation of costume and jewellery. |
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. |
fordable | Shallow enough to be crossed by walking or riding on an animal or in a vehicle. The stream was fordable. |
highway | A major road for any form of motor transport. The highway to success. |
intersect | (of two or more things) pass or lie across each other. The area is intersected only by minor roads. |
intersection | A point at which two or more things intersect, especially a road junction. The intersection of a plane and a cone. |
jaywalk | Cross the road at a red light. You jaywalked across a busy four lane street. |
junction | A region of transition in a semiconductor between a part where conduction is mainly by electrons and a part where it is mainly by holes. The junction of Queen s Road and Lancaster Avenue. |
lamppost | A metal post supporting an outdoor lamp (such as a streetlight. |
lane | Each of a number of notional parallel strips in the gel of an electrophoresis plate, occupied by a single sample. The shipping lanes of the South Atlantic. |
overlap | A part or amount which overlaps. The curtains overlap at the centre when closed. |
path | A definition of the order in which an operating system or program searches for a file or executable program. Genius usually follows a revolutionary path. |
pavement | The paved surface of a thoroughfare. He fell and hit his head on the pavement. |
pedestrian | Lacking wit or imagination. Disenchantment with their pedestrian lives. |
roadway | The part of a bridge or railway used by traffic. |
route | Send via a specific route. The scenic route from Florence to Siena. |
sidewalk | Walk consisting of a paved area for pedestrians; usually beside a street or roadway. |
skyway | A raised motorway. A second storey skyway links the two shops. |
street | People living or working on the same street. The street kids of the city. |
walker | New Zealand runner who in 1975 became the first person to run a mile in less that 3 minutes and 50 seconds (born in 1952. A fell walker. |
walkway | A passage or path for walking along, especially a raised passageway connecting different sections of a building or a wide path in a park or garden. |