Used to give advice or opinion that an action is, or would have been, beneficial or desirable.
Will be likely to (become or do something); indicates a degree of possibility or probability that the stated thing will happen or be true in the future.
Indicates that something is expected to have happened or to be the case now.
Used to express a conditional outcome.
With verbs such as 'see' or 'hear', usually in the second person, used to point out something remarkable in either a good or bad way.
To make a statement of what ought to be true, as opposed to reality.
Used to impart a tentative, conjectural or polite nuance.
Used to express what the speaker would do in another person's situation, as a means of giving a suggestion or recommendation.
Simple past tense of shall.
In questions, asks what is correct, proper, desirable, etc.
Used to issue an instruction (traditionally seen as carrying less force of authority than alternatives such as 'shall' or 'must').
Used to form a variant of the present subjunctive, expressing a state or action that is hypothetical, potential, mandated, etc.
Something that ought to be the case as opposed to already being the case.
To use the motions of opposition or counteraction.
To travel across, often under difficult conditions.
To lay in a cross direction; to cross.
To (make a cutting, an incline) across the gradients of a sloped face at safe rate.
To plane in a direction across the grain of the wood.
To deny formally.
To visit all parts of; to explore thoroughly.
To climb or descend a steep hill at a wide angle (relative to the slope).
To rotate a gun around a vertical axis to bear upon a military target.
To act against; to thwart or obstruct.
To pass over and view; to survey carefully.
In trench warfare, a defensive trench built to prevent enfilade.
A formal denial of some matter of fact alleged by the opposite party in any stage of the pleadings. The technical words introducing a traverse are absque hoc ("without this", i.e. without what follows).
Something that thwarts or obstructs.
The zigzag course or courses made by a ship in passing from one place to another; a compound course.
A gallery or loft of communication from side to side of a church or other large building.
A route used in mountaineering, specifically rock climbing, in which the descent occurs by a different route than the ascent.
A series of points, with angles and distances measured between, traveled around a subject, usually for use as "control" i.e. angular reference system for later surveying work.
A line lying across a figure or other lines; a transversal.
A traverse board.
athwart; across; crosswise
Lying across; being in a direction across something else.