THOROUGHFARE


Meaning of THOROUGHFARE in English

I. -ˌfa(a)](ə)r, -ˌfe], ]ə\ noun

Etymology: Middle English thoruhfare, from thoruh, thorugh, thorw, thorow through + fare passage — more at thorough , fare

1. : a way or place through which there is passing: as

a. archaic : a town through which considerable traffic passes

b.

(1) : a street that goes through from one street to another

(2) : an obstructed way open to the public

(3) : an important street or highway

c.

(1) : a waterway (as a river or strait) used for travel or shipping

(2) : a waterway usually without flowage between two bodies of water (as lakes)

2.

a. : the action of passing through : passage , transit

hell and this world, one realm, one continent of easy thoroughfare — John Milton

b. : the conditions necessary for passing through

a streetcar came, jerked to a stop just at the bumper, and clanged for thoroughfare — Margaret Avison

II. transitive verb

: to pass through

those slits that thoroughfared the older town — J.R.Lowell

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.