• Daily Crossword
  • Word Puzzle
  • Word Finder
  • Word of the Day
  • Synonym of the Day
  • Word of the Year
  • Language stories
  • All featured
  • Gender and sexuality
  • All pop culture
  • Writing hub
  • Grammar essentials
  • Commonly confused
  • All writing tips
  • Pop culture
  • Writing tips

Advertisement

[ voi -ij ]

Synonyms: cruise

  • a passage through air or space, as a flight in an airplane or space vehicle.
  • a journey or expedition from one place to another by land.

the voyages of Marco Polo.

  • Obsolete. an enterprise or undertaking.

verb (used without object)

  • to make or take a voyage; travel; journey.

verb (used with object)

to voyage the seven seas.

/ ˈvɔɪɪdʒ /

  • a journey, travel, or passage, esp one to a distant land or by sea or air
  • obsolete. an ambitious project

we will voyage to Africa

Discover More

Derived forms.

  • ˈvoyager , noun

Other Words From

  • voyag·er noun
  • outvoyage verb (used with object) outvoyaged outvoyaging
  • re·voyage noun verb revoyaged revoyaging
  • un·voyag·ing adjective

Word History and Origins

Origin of voyage 1

Idioms and Phrases

Synonym study, example sentences.

The preserve is such hardy stuff, in fact, that Christopher Columbus packed it alongside salt cod and hardtack on his transatlantic voyages.

Other data do suggest that ancient humans could have deliberately made the voyage to the Ryukyu Islands.

It is unlikely that ancient mariners would have set out on an ocean voyage with a major storm on the horizon, say paleoanthropologist Yousuke Kaifu of the University of Tokyo and colleagues.

Days after the Diamond Princess evacuation, a ship from the same company, the Grand Princess, set sail from San Francisco on another ill-fated voyage.

A statue of its namesake explorer stands in the lobby, near a chart of Cook’s voyages.

It used to carry livestock but sailed its final voyage with a hold full of Syrian men, women, and children.

People might be surprised that during that period “Maiden Voyage,” one of your most well-loved standards, began as a TV jingle.

It has now been revealed that Princess Beatrice will not be among those who will ultimately voyage with Virgin Galactic.

The turbulent waters caused one of his oars to crack, which—without a motor or a sail—can be severely detrimental to his voyage.

The voyage is a new one, certainly for Tambor, but also for Hollywood, in many ways.

Roman Pane who accompanied Columbus on his second voyage alludes to another method of using the herb.

Henry Hudson sailed from Gravesend on his first voyage for the discovery of a northwest passage to India.

I shipped for a voyage to Japan and China, and spent several more years trying to penetrate the forbidden fastnesses of Tibet.

The Swedish boatswain consoled him, and he modified his opinions as the voyage went on.

Capt. Ross sailed from Shetland, on his first voyage for the discovery of the north-west passage.

Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

  • Dictionaries home
  • American English
  • Collocations
  • German-English
  • Grammar home
  • Practical English Usage
  • Learn & Practise Grammar (Beta)
  • Word Lists home
  • My Word Lists
  • Recent additions
  • Resources home
  • Text Checker

Definition of voyage noun from the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

Want to learn more?

Find out which words work together and produce more natural-sounding English with the Oxford Collocations Dictionary app. Try it for free as part of the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary app.

def of voyages

Definitions of 'voyage'

English usage, conjugations of 'voyage', synonyms of 'voyage', examples of 'voyage'  in a sentence, translations of 'voyage', 'voyage' in other languages.

Quick word challenge

Quiz Review

Score: 0 / 5

Image

Wordle Helper

Tile

Scrabble Tools

Image

  • TheFreeDictionary
  • Word / Article
  • Starts with
  • Free toolbar & extensions
  • Word of the Day
  • Free content

voy•age

A journey is the process of travelling from one place to another by land, air, or sea.

A trip is the process of travelling from one place to another, staying there, usually for a short time, and coming back again.

A voyage is a long journey from one place to another in a ship or spacecraft.

An excursion is a short trip made either as a tourist or in order to do a particular thing.

You make or go on a journey.

You take or go on a trip.

You make a voyage.

You go on an excursion.

Be Careful! Don't use 'do' with any of these words. Don't say, for example, ' We did a bus trip '.

  • Banks Joseph
  • Bartlett Robert Abram
  • Bill of store
  • Brown Robert
  • business trip
  • Can I cash my traveler's checks here?
  • Can I change my traveller's cheques here?
  • charterparty
  • coastal convoy
  • Coasting trade
  • Columbus Christopher
  • consecutive voyage charter
  • Dana Richard Henry
  • vowel fracture
  • vowel gradation
  • vowel mutation
  • vowel point
  • vowel rhyme
  • vowel sound
  • vowel system
  • vox angelica
  • voyage charter
  • Voyageurs National Park
  • voyeuristic
  • voyeuristical
  • voyeuristically
  • Voznesenski
  • Voznesenski Andrei
  • Voznesensky
  • vraisemblance
  • Vox populi vox Dei
  • vox populi, vox Dei
  • Voxel-Based Analysis
  • Voxel-based morphometry
  • Voxware Compression Toolkit
  • Voy Y Vuelvo
  • Voya Nui Online Game
  • Voyage Across Technology
  • Voyage au bout de la nuit
  • Voyage au centre de la Terre
  • Voyage Culture Cuba
  • Voyage Data Recorder
  • Voyage de Recherché d'un Domicile
  • Voyage Document Number
  • Voyage Home
  • Voyage into the Unknown
  • Voyage Management System
  • Voyage of the Damned
  • Voyage of the Odyssey
  • Voyage of the Princess Ark
  • Voyage Pas Cher
  • Voyage Policies
  • Voyage Policy
  • Voyage Repair
  • Voyage Repair Availability
  • Voyage to Venus
  • Facebook Share
  • 1.1 Etymology
  • 1.2 Pronunciation
  • 1.3.1 Synonyms
  • 1.3.2 Derived terms
  • 1.3.3 Related terms
  • 1.3.4 Translations
  • 1.4.1 Conjugation
  • 1.4.2 Translations
  • 2.1 Etymology
  • 2.2 Pronunciation
  • 2.4.1 Related terms
  • 2.5 Further reading
  • 2.6 Anagrams

English [ edit ]

Etymology [ edit ].

From Middle English viage , borrowed from Anglo-Norman viage and Old French voiage , from Latin viaticum . The modern spelling is under the influence of Modern French voyage . Doublet of viaticum .

Pronunciation [ edit ]

  • IPA ( key ) : /ˈvɔɪ.ɪd͡ʒ/

Noun [ edit ]

voyage ( plural voyages )

  • 1599 (first performance), William Shakespeare, “ The Tragedie of Iulius Cæsar ”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies   [ … ] ( First Folio ), London: [ … ] Isaac Iaggard , and Ed [ ward ] Blount , published 1623 , →OCLC , [ Act IV, scene iii ] , page 126 , column 1: There is a Tide in the affayres of men, / Which taken at the Flood, leades on to Fortune: / Omitted, all the voyage of their life, / Is bound in Shallowes, and in Miſeries.
  • 1621 (first performance), John Fletcher , “ The Wild-Goose Chase; a Comedy ”, in Fifty Comedies and Tragedies.   [ … ] , [ part 1 ] , London: [ … ] J [ ohn ] Macock [ and H. Hills ] , for John Martyn , Henry Herringman , and Richard Marriot , published 1679 , →OCLC , Act V, scene vi, page 467 , column 2: I love a Sea voyage and a bluſtring tempeſt; [...]
  • 1880 , Richard Francis Burton , Os Lusíadas , volume I, page 23 : "And as their valour, so you trow, defied on aspe'rous voyage cruel harm and sore, so many changing skies their manhood tried, such climes where storm-winds blow and billows roar[.]"
  • 1690 , “ The Preface to the Reader ”, in A Full and True Relation of the Great and Wonderful Revolution That Hapned Lately in the Kingdom of Siam in the East-Indies , London: Randal Taylor, page v: I cannot learn what his Name was, unleſs by the Inſcription of the Letters he ſent to the Pope, and to the French King in the Year 1688, mentioned in the ſecond Voyage of Father Tachard [ … ]
  • 1690 , “ A Relation of the Late Great Revolution in Siam, and the Driving Out of the French ”, in A Full and True Relation of the Great and Wonderful Revolution That Hapned Lately in the Kingdom of Siam in the East-Indies , London: Randal Taylor, page 1: By the various Relations, Embaſſies and Voyages of Siam that have been publiſht within theſe laſt Four Years [ … ]
  • 1631 , Francis [Bacon] , “ New Atlantis. A Worke Vnfinished. ”, in Sylua Syluarum: Or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centuries.   [ … ] , 3rd edition, London: [ … ] William Rawley ; [ p ] rinted by J [ ohn ] H [ aviland ] for William Lee   [ … ] , page 12 , →OCLC : [...] [A]ll Nations haue Enterknowledge one of another, either by Voyage into Forreine Parts, or by Strangers that come to them: [...]

Synonyms [ edit ]

  • exploration

Derived terms [ edit ]

  • maiden voyage
  • nom de voyage
  • not wanted on voyage
  • voyage data recorder
  • voyage of the damned

Related terms [ edit ]

Translations [ edit ], verb [ edit ].

voyage ( third-person singular simple present voyages , present participle voyaging , simple past and past participle voyaged )

  • 1850 , William Wordsworth , The Prelude : A mind forever voyaging through strange seas of thought alone.
  • 1870 , Walt Whitman, “Passage to India”, in Leaves of Grass   [ … ] , Philadelphia, Pa.: David McKay, publisher ,   [ … ] , published 1892 , →OCLC , stanza 9, page 322 : O soul, voyagest thou indeed on voyages like those? / Disportest thou on waters such as those?

Conjugation [ edit ]

† Archaic or obsolete .

French [ edit ]

Inherited from Old French voiage , viage , veiage , from Latin viāticum . Doublet of viatique .

  • IPA ( key ) : /vwa.jaʒ/
  • ( Louisiana ) IPA ( key ) : [vo.jaʒ] , [(v)wɒ.jaʒ]
  • Homophones : voyagent , voyages
  • Hyphenation: vo‧yage
  • Rhymes: -ɑʒ

voyage   m ( plural voyages )

  • trip , travel
  • first / third-person singular present indicative / subjunctive
  • second-person singular imperative
  • agence de voyages
  • gens de voyage
  • récit de voyage
  • voyage d’affaires
  • voyage dans le temps
  • voyage de noces

Further reading [ edit ]

  • “ voyage ”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [ Digitized Treasury of the French Language ] , 2012 .

Anagrams [ edit ]

def of voyages

  • English terms inherited from Middle English
  • English terms derived from Middle English
  • English terms derived from Anglo-Norman
  • English terms derived from Old French
  • English terms derived from Latin
  • English terms derived from French
  • English doublets
  • English 2-syllable words
  • English terms with IPA pronunciation
  • English terms with audio links
  • English lemmas
  • English nouns
  • English countable nouns
  • English terms with quotations
  • English terms with archaic senses
  • English terms with obsolete senses
  • English verbs
  • English intransitive verbs
  • en:Nautical
  • French terms inherited from Old French
  • French terms derived from Old French
  • French terms inherited from Latin
  • French terms derived from Latin
  • French doublets
  • French 2-syllable words
  • French terms with IPA pronunciation
  • French terms with audio links
  • French terms with homophones
  • Rhymes:French/ɑʒ
  • Rhymes:French/ɑʒ/2 syllables
  • French lemmas
  • French nouns
  • French countable nouns
  • French masculine nouns
  • French non-lemma forms
  • French verb forms
  • English entries with topic categories using raw markup
  • Terms with Afrikaans translations
  • Terms with Albanian translations
  • Terms with Arabic translations
  • Egyptian Arabic terms with redundant script codes
  • Terms with Egyptian Arabic translations
  • Terms with Armenian translations
  • Terms with Azerbaijani translations
  • Terms with Bulgarian translations
  • Terms with Catalan translations
  • Mandarin terms with redundant transliterations
  • Terms with Mandarin translations
  • Terms with Czech translations
  • Terms with Dutch translations
  • Terms with Esperanto translations
  • Terms with Finnish translations
  • Terms with French translations
  • Terms with Georgian translations
  • Terms with German translations
  • Terms with Greek translations
  • Terms with Ancient Greek translations
  • Terms with Hebrew translations
  • Terms with Hungarian translations
  • Terms with Ido translations
  • Terms with Italian translations
  • Japanese terms with redundant script codes
  • Terms with Japanese translations
  • Terms with Korean translations
  • Terms with Latvian translations
  • Terms with Macedonian translations
  • Terms with Malay translations
  • Terms with Maori translations
  • Terms with Mongolian translations
  • Mongolian terms with redundant script codes
  • Terms with Navajo translations
  • Terms with Norwegian translations
  • Terms with Occitan translations
  • Terms with Persian translations
  • Terms with Plautdietsch translations
  • Terms with Polish translations
  • Terms with Portuguese translations
  • Terms with Romanian translations
  • Terms with Russian translations
  • Terms with Scottish Gaelic translations
  • Serbo-Croatian terms with redundant script codes
  • Terms with Serbo-Croatian translations
  • Terms with Spanish translations
  • Terms with Swedish translations
  • Terms with Turkish translations
  • Terms with Welsh translations
  • Quotation templates to be cleaned

Navigation menu

Cambridge Dictionary

  • Cambridge Dictionary +Plus

Definition of voyage in Essential British English Dictionary

Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio

(Definition of voyage from the Cambridge Essential Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

Translations of voyage

Get a quick, free translation!

{{randomImageQuizHook.quizId}}

Word of the Day

two-wheeler

a vehicle with two wheels, usually a bicycle

Keeping up appearances (Talking about how things seem)

Keeping up appearances (Talking about how things seem)

def of voyages

Learn more with +Plus

  • Recent and Recommended {{#preferredDictionaries}} {{name}} {{/preferredDictionaries}}
  • Definitions Clear explanations of natural written and spoken English English Learner’s Dictionary Essential British English Essential American English
  • Grammar and thesaurus Usage explanations of natural written and spoken English Grammar Thesaurus
  • Pronunciation British and American pronunciations with audio English Pronunciation
  • English–Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Simplified)–English
  • English–Chinese (Traditional) Chinese (Traditional)–English
  • English–Dutch Dutch–English
  • English–French French–English
  • English–German German–English
  • English–Indonesian Indonesian–English
  • English–Italian Italian–English
  • English–Japanese Japanese–English
  • English–Norwegian Norwegian–English
  • English–Polish Polish–English
  • English–Portuguese Portuguese–English
  • English–Spanish Spanish–English
  • English–Swedish Swedish–English
  • Dictionary +Plus Word Lists
  • Essential British English    Noun
  • Translations
  • All translations

To add voyage to a word list please sign up or log in.

Add voyage to one of your lists below, or create a new one.

{{message}}

Something went wrong.

There was a problem sending your report.

  • To save this word, you'll need to log in. Log In

Definition of bon voyage

  • congee
  • good-by

Examples of bon voyage in a Sentence

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'bon voyage.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

French, literally, good journey!

15th century, in the meaning defined above

Dictionary Entries Near bon voyage

Cite this entry.

“Bon voyage.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary , Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bon%20voyage. Accessed 3 Jun. 2024.

Kids Definition

Kids definition of bon voyage.

French, literally, "good journey"

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!

Play Quordle: Guess all four words in a limited number of tries.  Each of your guesses must be a real 5-letter word.

Can you solve 4 words at once?

Word of the day.

See Definitions and Examples »

Get Word of the Day daily email!

Popular in Grammar & Usage

More commonly misspelled words, commonly misspelled words, how to use em dashes (—), en dashes (–) , and hyphens (-), absent letters that are heard anyway, how to use accents and diacritical marks, popular in wordplay, the words of the week - may 31, pilfer: how to play and win, 9 superb owl words, 10 words for lesser-known games and sports, etymologies for every day of the week, games & quizzes.

Play Blossom: Solve today's spelling word game by finding as many words as you can using just 7 letters. Longer words score more points.

IMAGES

  1. Voyage : La définition

    def of voyages

  2. Voyage : La définition

    def of voyages

  3. Voyage pronunciation and definition

    def of voyages

  4. Affiche Définition Voyage

    def of voyages

  5. Travel

    def of voyages

  6. Voyage Meaning

    def of voyages

COMMENTS

  1. Voyage Definition & Meaning

    How to use voyage in a sentence. an act or instance of traveling : journey; a course or period of traveling by other than land routes; an account of a journey especially by sea… See the full definition

  2. VOYAGE Definition & Meaning

    Voyage definition: a course of travel or passage, especially a long journey by water to a distant place.. See examples of VOYAGE used in a sentence.

  3. VOYAGE

    VOYAGE definition: 1. a long journey, especially by ship: 2. to travel: 3. a long trip, especially by ship: . Learn more.

  4. voyage noun

    Lady Franklin kept a journal during the voyage. The ship completed her maiden voyage in May. There were mainly scientists on the voyage. Bering's voyage of discovery was one of many scientific expeditions in the 18th century. The ship began its return voyage to Europe. The ship was badly damaged during the voyage from Plymouth.

  5. Voyage

    voyage: 1 n a journey to some distant place Types: crossing a voyage across a body of water (usually across the Atlantic Ocean) space travel , spacefaring , spaceflight a voyage outside the Earth's atmosphere Type of: journey , journeying the act of traveling from one place to another n an act of traveling by water Synonyms: ocean trip Types: ...

  6. VOYAGE definition and meaning

    3 meanings: 1. a journey, travel, or passage, esp one to a distant land or by sea or air 2. obsolete an ambitious project 3. to.... Click for more definitions.

  7. Voyage Definition & Meaning

    plural voyages. Britannica Dictionary definition of VOYAGE. [count] : a long journey to a distant or unknown place especially over water or through outer space. The Titanic sank on her maiden voyage. He wrote about his many voyages into the South Seas. a manned voyage to Mars. — often used figuratively.

  8. voyage noun

    Definition of voyage noun in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. Voyage Definition & Meaning

    Voyage definition: A long journey to a foreign or distant place, especially by sea.

  10. VOYAGE definition in American English

    voyage in American English. (ˈvɔiɪdʒ) (verb -aged, -aging) noun. 1. a course of travel or passage, esp. a long journey by water to a distant place. 2. a passage through air or space, as a flight in an airplane or space vehicle. 3. a journey or expedition from one place to another by land.

  11. VOYAGE

    VOYAGE meaning: 1. a long journey, especially by ship: 2. to travel: 3. a long trip, especially by ship: . Learn more.

  12. VOYAGE

    All you need to know about "VOYAGE" in one place: definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  13. Voyage

    Define voyage. voyage synonyms, voyage pronunciation, voyage translation, English dictionary definition of voyage. n. 1. A long journey to a foreign or distant place, especially by sea. 2. a. often voyages The events of a journey of exploration or discovery considered as...

  14. voyage

    voyage (plural voyages) A long journey, especially by ship . ( archaic) A written account of a journey or travel . ( obsolete) The act or practice of travelling .

  15. VOYAGE

    VOYAGE definition: a long journey, especially by ship, or in space: . Learn more.

  16. voyage

    voyage - WordReference English dictionary, questions, discussion and forums. All Free. ... Often, voyages. journeys or travels as the subject of a written account, or the account itself: the voyages of Marco Polo. [Obs.] an enterprise or undertaking. v.i. to make or take a voyage; travel;

  17. voyage

    voyage meaning: a long journey, especially by ship or in space: . Learn more.

  18. voyage

    The meaning of voyage. Definition of voyage. English dictionary and integrated thesaurus for learners, writers, teachers, and students with advanced, intermediate, and beginner levels.

  19. voyage

    the Titanic's maiden voyage (= first journey) I don't want to make the voyage single-handed. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. see thesaurus at journey 2 → voyage of discovery Examples from the Corpus voyage • After a voyage of investigation in 1584 a colony that was intended to be permanent was launched in 1585.

  20. voyage

    The meaning of voyage. Definition of voyage. Best online English dictionaries for children, with kid-friendly definitions, integrated thesaurus for kids, images, and animations. Spanish and Chinese language support available

  21. Bon voyage Definition & Meaning

    The meaning of BON VOYAGE is an expression of good wishes when someone leaves on a journey : goodbye —often used interjectionally. How to use bon voyage in a sentence.