navigate
IPA: nˈævʌgeɪt
verb
- (transitive) To plan, control and record the position and course of a vehicle, ship, aircraft, etc., on a journey; to follow a planned course.
- (intransitive) To give directions, as from a map, to someone driving a vehicle.
- (intransitive) To travel over water in a ship; to sail.
- (transitive, computing) To move between web pages, menus, etc. by means of hyperlinks, mouse clicks, or any other mechanism.
- (transitive, figurative) To find a way through a difficult situation or process.
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Examples of "navigate" in Sentences
- He was able to navigate due to polestar.
- The player then begins to navigate the course.
- The screen is responsive and easy to navigate.
- It’s just that an easy way to navigate is to use the names of objects as benchmarks.
- But inability to navigate is as incomprehensible to me as colorblindness, or discalculia.
- I use the word "navigate" because I tend to think of the chemical world as an unfinished map.
- Now if only there were an easy way to navigate from the page the RSS takes me to, directly to the comic.
- A great way to navigate is to check out a directory of stores that qualify as sanctioned “green” shopping sites.
- I've found the most convenient way to navigate is to after selecting a year, click on the title page and then select the 'Vorschau' tab.
- Handed a political landscape of broad competing interests, the best way to navigate is to offer a broad but concrete goal and jump hurdles.
- Once upon a time I was able to skate down stairs, jump curbs, slolam down steep hills, in short, navigate just about any urban situation that got thrown at me.