Search results
- Dictionaryroam/rəʊm/
verb
- 1. move about or travel aimlessly or unsystematically, especially over a wide area: "tigers once roamed over most of Asia"
- 2. use a mobile phone on another operator's network, typically while abroad: "Orange now allows Pay As You Go mobile phone customers to roam in the US"
noun
- 1. an aimless walk: "did you get to explore the city or have a roam around Bath?"
Powered by Oxford Dictionaries
Roam means to move about or travel without a clear plan or purpose, or to have sexual relationships outside of your relationship. Learn more about the verb roam, its synonyms, and its usage in different contexts.
- English (US)
ROAM meaning: 1. to move about or travel, especially without...
- Znaczenie Roam, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
ROAM definicja: 1. to move about or travel, especially...
- Roam: Japanese Translation
ROAM translate: ~をうろつく, (目的なく)~を歩き回る, 散策(さんさく)する. Learn more...
- Roam Spanish Translation
ROAM translate: vagar (por), recorrer, deambular, vagar....
- Roam: Indonesian Translation
roam translate: berkelana. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Roam: Catalan Translation
roam translate: rondar, vagar (per). Learn more in the...
- Roam: Arabic Translation
ROAM translate: يَحوم. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Roam: German Translation
roam translate: stromern. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- English (US)
Roam means to go from place to place without purpose or direction, or to use a cell phone outside one's local calling area. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related phrases of roam.
Roam definition: to walk, go, or travel without a fixed purpose or direction; ramble; wander; rove. See examples of ROAM used in a sentence.
Roam means to move about or travel without a clear plan or purpose. It can also mean to touch or look in many places, especially in a sexual way, or to have sexual relationships outside of your marriage.
Roam means to travel or walk about with no fixed purpose or direction; wander. Learn the synonyms, pronunciation, grammar, and examples of roam in British and American English.
When you wander without a plan or a specific destination, you roam. Your cat may stay close to your house when you let her outside, or she may roam around the neighborhood all day. Dogs and kids on bikes tend to roam in packs, looking for food or fun, while a tiger in the zoo roams aimlessly around his enclosure.
Roam means to move about without purpose or plan, or to use a cell phone network outside of a home service area. Find out more about the origin, usage, and translations of roam in different languages.