trek• The scouts will have to trek 40km back to the base camp.• They found their way inside the collar of my coat as I trekked along Dudhope Terrace against a strong headwind.• Hunters can't trekdeep into snowywoods.• Maria's going trekking in the Himalayas this year.• Now the locals have to trek one and a half miles to the nearest one.• She could trek through the grass playing Jungle Explorers, swinging on the creepers like a tiny Tarzan.• A visitortreks to the pumps from the darkened viewing room of the aquarium by opening an unmarked door.• We trekked up Mount Calahi for five days.
trek in/across etc• AuthorChuck Bowden wandered across it and wrote about the trek inBlueDesert.• The long trek inhotweathersapped our energy and emptied our water bottles.• Together they made an arduous two-day trek across mountains with women and child refugees to the coastaltown of Split.• Methodists accepted this agenda, though they tended to reverse the order of priorities for their trek across the country.• But they have no belongings with them, no day packs, no water bottles for the trek across the desert.• All this supposes that the persons mentioned want to go on the searchtrek in the first place.• We trekked across the wetsand towards Tony on the far bank ahead of us.
Origintrek2
(1800-1900)AfrikaansMiddle Dutchtrecken“to pull, haul, move to new land”
ADJECTIVE | VERB + TREK | PREPOSITIONADJECTIVE➤long, marathon (especially BrE) 長途跋涉;馬拉松式的徒步行走▸➤20-mile, etc. * 20 英里等的徒步行走▸➤3-day, 10-hour, etc. * 3 天、10 小時等的徒步行走▸➤arduous, gruelling/grueling, strenuous艱苦跋涉▸➤short短途跋涉➤cross-country徒步越野VERB + TREK➤go on, make, take徒步行走;長途跋涉◇The family made the long trek west in 1890.1890 年全家長途跋涉前往西部。➤begin開始跋涉▸➤continue繼續跋涉PREPOSITION➤on a/the trek在徒步行走