roadway

English

Etymology

From Middle English *rodeway, *radewey (attested in radewey-stile (literally roadway-stile)), equivalent to road +‎ way; road had the early sense of "riding" when the compound was formed, thus originally "a way for riding on".

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /ˈɹoʊdˌweɪ/
  • Audio (Southern England):(file)

Noun

roadway (plural roadways)

  1. A way used as a road.
    • 2023 April 20, Gregory Wallace, “Roadway deaths level off after pandemic spike, but remain high”, in CNN[1]:
      It’s a dip of fewer than 150 deaths from highs reached in 2021, when the agency recorded the largest quarterly spike in its history of tracking roadway fatalities.
    • 2024 January 21, Elizabeth Wolfe, Robert Shackelford and Mary Gilbert, “Icy conditions make for hazardous travel across central US, but warmer air is on the horizon”, in CNN[2]:
      Morning commuters in parts of Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas discovered slick sidewalks and icy roadways Monday.
  2. The main or central portion of a road, used by the vehicles.
  3. The portion of a bridge or railway used by traffic.

Translations

See also