[a. F. trajet:—L. traject-us: see TRAJECT sb.]

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  1.  A crossing, passage, ‘run across’; = TRAJECT sb. 2.

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1741.  Berkeley, in Fraser, Life, viii. (1871), 268. You may … come to Bath, and from thence … make a short trajet to our coast.

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1825.  T. Hook, Sayings, Ser. II. Sutherl., I. 136. During the trajet from the Castle Inn at Marlborough.

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1885.  ‘Mrs. Alexander,’ At Bay, iii. There is an earlier one … by the Dieppe route, but you gain no time, for the trajet is longer.

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1894.  Field, 1 Dec., 828/1. Made their trajet to Blessington town from Dublin.

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  2.  The course or passage of a nerve or the like.

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1849–52.  Todd’s Cycl. Anat., IV. 815/2. The trajet of the nerve is external to that of the internal jugular vein.

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