Pronunciation of the English word travel.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel's sake. The great affair is to move. | |
2. | For my part, I don't travel to go somewhere in particular. I travel for travel's sake. The main thing is to move. | |
3. | Air travel is fast; sea travel is, however, restful. | |
4. | When I travel, I prefer to travel by air. | |
5. | We do not travel to travel, but to have traveled. | |
6. | If you can't afford travel insurance, then you can't afford to travel. | |
7. | NASA has launched a probe called Dawn, whose mission is to travel to the asteroid belt. It will first travel to observe the asteroid Vesta. After collecting data from Vesta, Dawn will intercept with Ceres where it will observe its surface features and collect data about its chemical composition. | |
8. | Many of you don't travel much and don't travel too far. | |
9. | The State Department issued an unprecedented global Level 4 travel advisory warning Americans not to travel abroad and for those in other countries to return immediately unless they plan to stay outside the United States for an extended period time. | |
10. | To travel by train is cheaper, more Eco-friendly, you can meet thousands of people, you can go to the toilet without interrupting your travel, you can stretch or stand up and walk around, you can also mind your own stuff. |