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How to correctly use the expression “safe travel (s)”? The expression "Safe Travels" as a valediction seems perfectly acceptable to me It may not be what most native speakers would say but it is polite and meaningful EDIT A better known phrase is " Travel safely! " This is a friendly imperative You'll find lots of examples online Try searching Google Images for example
Is Give the gift of safe travel correct? [closed] Give the Gift of SAFE TRAVEL I am putting together a Christmas card and there is some debate as to whether this is grammatically correct My thoughts are, you don't say give the gift of travels so you wouldn't say give the gift of safe travels
word choice - Difference between safe and secure - English Language . . . 9 The birds' nests are high up, safe secure from predators These elephants are relatively secure safe from poachers Make sure you keep these documents safe secure Keep your credit cards in a safe secure place I always feel safe secure when I'm around my big dog What's the difference between safe and secure in these examples?
Phrases about a journey in BrE and AmE [closed] Also common for departures: Have a safe trip! Have a nice flight! Have fun in [destination]! Farewell! Safe travels! Happy trails! And arrivals: How was your trip? How was your flight? I hope you had a nice flight! Did you have any trouble getting here?
Travel vs. travels - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Journeys, esp long or exotic ones “perhaps you'll write a book about your travels” When you use the noun travel individually to mean a journey, trip, adventure, or holiday (definition 2, as in “my travel to Paris” or “my travels to various places“), then when you are referring to multiple such trips it will require the plural
grammaticality - Which is correct: drive safe or drive safely . . . In it "safe" in "drive safe" is classed as a "flat adverb" The editor's opinion is they used to be more common in the past, but that prescriptivist grammarians from the 18th century considered them to be a mistake, which is the possible reason for their decline
meaning in context - English Language Usage Stack Exchange From Tim Dale, Safe Travels: Run for Your Lives (2015): I walked inside and ordered some food Irwin's the one that served me I only had a twenty on me, and since no one around here takes paper money, especially when it's from a different planet, I had no coin to offer So he offered me a job to pay it off He was very nice to me That's it
What is the origin of the phrase Top of the morning to you? Here is Dick Ostler in Sir Walter Scott's The Heart of Mid-Lothian (1818), ch 29, speaking to the heroine as she travels near York: Dick Ostler, who either had risen early or neglected to go to bed, either circumstance being equally incident to his calling, hollowed out after her — “ The top of the morning to you, Moggie