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Asked on December 18, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 18, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 18, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 18, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 17, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 17, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 17, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 17, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 17, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes
-
Asked on December 17, 2021 in Single word requests.
Which is better “It is not a shortcut, it is a detour and not something that I can do.” Detour
– Noun A
long or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way Verb,
chiefly North American A long
or roundabout route taken to avoid something or to visit somewhere along the way.
Origin:
Mid 18th century (as a noun): from French du00e9tour ‘change of direction’, from du00e9tourner ‘turn away’.
- 304729 views
- 650 answers
- 111942 votes