- commute between
- phr. v. เดินทางระหว่าง (ในแต่ละวัน)
English-Thai dictionary. 2014.
English-Thai dictionary. 2014.
commute — com‧mute [kəˈmjuːt] verb [intransitive] TRAVEL to regularly travel a long distance for your work: commute between • a businessman who commutes between Northern Ireland and Hong Kong commute noun [countable usually singular] : • He got fed up … Financial and business terms
commute — v. 1) (D; intr.) ( to travel regularly ) to commute between; from; to (to commute between two cities; to commute from the suburbs to the city) 2) (D; tr.) ( to change ) to commute to (the Governor commuted his death sentence to life imprisonment) … Combinatory dictionary
Commute — Com*mute , v. i. 1. To obtain or bargain for exemption or substitution; to effect a commutation. [1913 Webster] He . . . thinks it unlawful to commute, and that he is bound to pay his vow in kind. Jer. Taylor. [1913 Webster] 2. To pay, or arrange … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Commute — Commute, commutation or commutative may refer to: Commuting, the process of travelling between a place of residence and a place of work Commutative property, a property of a mathematical operation Commutation of sentence, a reduction in severity… … Wikipedia
commute — ► VERB 1) travel some distance between one s home and place of work on a regular basis. 2) reduce (a judicial sentence, especially a sentence of death) to a less severe one. 3) change (one kind of payment or obligation) for (another). DERIVATIVES … English terms dictionary
commute — [[t]kəmju͟ːt[/t]] commutes, commuting, commuted 1) VERB If you commute, you travel a long distance every day between your home and your place of work. [V to/from n] Mike commutes to London every day... [V between n and n] McLaren began commuting… … English dictionary
commute — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun Commute is used after these nouns: ↑morning {{Roman}}II.{{/Roman}} verb ADVERB ▪ daily, every day ▪ regularly ▪ back and forth … Collocations dictionary
commute — com|mute1 [kəˈmju:t] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: commutare to exchange, change , from com ( COM ) + mutare to change ] 1.) to regularly travel a long distance to get to work commute to/from/between ▪ Jim commutes to Manhattan every day.… … Dictionary of contemporary English
commute — 01. I usually [commute] to work by bicycle, except when the weather is really bad. 02. Eric has to [commute] about 50 miles to work every day. 03. Two [commuter] trains crashed this morning in London, killing ten people and injuring scores of… … Grammatical examples in English
commute — 1 verb 1 (I) to regularly travel a long distance to get to work (+ to/from/between): Jim commutes from Weehawken to Manhattan every day. 2 (T) to change the punishment given to a criminal to one that is less severe: commute a sentence (to): The… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
commute — I. verb (commuted; commuting) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin commutare to change, exchange, from com + mutare to change more at mutable Date: 15th century transitive verb 1. a. change, alter b. to … New Collegiate Dictionary