Travel:
The act of moving from one place to another is called travel. This can be temporarily or for short period of time. People can travel by foot, bicycle, train, boat, and airplane, automobile and other means with or without luggage and can be one way or round trip. The word “travel” originated from the Old French word travail which means struggle.
Trip:
Trip is the movement of people between relatively distant geographical regions. It is usually for short period of time. It is short journey with an intention to return.
Differences:
Basis | Travel | Trip |
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Definition (www.oxforddictionaries.com) | Relating to or using signals or information represented by a continuously variable physical quantity such as spatial position or voltage. | Go on a short journey |
Synonyms | Voyage, journey, drive, locomotion, ramble, traverse | Trek, excursion, blunder, run, expedition, outing |
Antonyms | Stay, belong, continue, droop, arrive, bear | Deactivate, brave, castrate, assign, arrange, accuracy |
Word origin | The word travel was originated from Middle English: a variant of travail, and originally in the same sense. | The word trip was originated from Middle English: from Old French triper, from Middle Dutch trippen ‘to skip, hop’. |
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