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  1. Dictionary
    traipse
    /treɪps/

    verb

    • 1. walk or move wearily or reluctantly: "students had to traipse all over London to attend lectures"

    noun

    • 1. a tedious or tiring journey on foot.
    • 2. a slovenly woman. archaic

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. TRAIPSE definition: 1. to walk from one place to another, often feeling tired or bored: 2. to walk from one place to…. Learn more.

  3. Traipse is a verb that means to go on foot or to walk without a plan or purpose. Learn the synonyms, examples, history, and usage of traipse from the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  4. Traipse means to walk unwillingly, often because you are tired or unhappy, or to annoy someone by walking around. Learn more about the word origin, usage, and synonyms of traipse from Collins English Dictionary.

  5. To traipse is to walk around with a sloppy or aimless attitude. A bored high school student might traipse through a museum on a class trip, for example. When you traipse, you trudge in an exhausted or reluctant way.

  6. Traipse is an informal verb that means to walk from one place to another, often feeling tired or bored. Learn how to use it in sentences, how to pronounce it and how to translate it in other languages.

  7. Traipse means to walk or tramp about aimlessly or heavily, or to walk over or about something. See the origin, synonyms, translations and usage of traipse in different contexts.

  8. Jun 30, 2024 · traipse (third-person singular simple present traipses, present participle traipsing, simple past and past participle traipsed) ( intransitive ) To walk in a messy or unattractively casual way; to trail through dirt.