highway

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
highway
    n 1: a major road for any form of motor transport [syn:
         {highway}, {main road}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Highway \High"way`\, n.
   A road or way open to the use of the public, especially a
   paved main road or thoroughfare between towns; in the latter
   sense it contrasts with {local street}; as, on the highways
   and byways.

   Syn: Way; road; path; course.
        [1913 Webster]
    
from Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Highway
a raised road for public use. Such roads were not found in
Palestine; hence the force of the language used to describe the
return of the captives and the advent of the Messiah (Isa.
11:16; 35:8; 40:3; 62:10) under the figure of the preparation of
a grand thoroughfare for their march.

  During their possession of Palestine the Romans constructed
several important highways, as they did in all countries which
they ruled.
    
from Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)
HIGHWAY. A passage or road through the country, or some parts of it, for the 
use of the people. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 442. The term highway is said to be a 
generic name for all kinds of public ways. 6 Mod R, 255. 
     2. Highways are universally laid out by public authority and repaired 
at the public expense, by direction of law. 4 Burr. Rep. 2511. 
     3. The public have an easement over a highway, of which the owner of 
the land cannot deprive them; but the soil and freehold still remain in the 
owner, and he may use the land above and below consistently with the 
easement. He may, therefore, work a mine, sink a drain or water course, 
under the highway, if the easement remains unimpaired. Vide Road; Street; 
Way; and 4 Vin. Ab. 502; Bac. Ab. h.t.; Com. Dig. Chemin; Dane's Ab. Index, 
h.t.; Egremont on Highways; Wellbeloved on Highways; Woolrych on Ways; 1 N. 
H. Rep. 16; 1 Conn. R. 103; 1 Pick. R. 122; 1 M'Cord's R. 67; 2 Mass. R. 
127; 1 Pick. R. 122; 3 Rawle, R. 495; 15 John. R. 483; 16 Mass. R. 33; 1 
Shepl. R. 250; 4 Day, R. 330; 2 Bail. R. 271; 1 Yeates, Rep. 167. 
     4. The owners of lots on opposite sides of a highway, are prima facie 
owners, each of one half of the highway,, 9 Serg. & Rawle, 33; Ham. Parties, 
275; Bro. Abr. Nuisance, pl. 18 and the owner may recover the possession in 
ejectment, and have it delivered to him, subject to the public easement. 
Adams on Eject. 19, 18; 2 Johns. Rep. 357; 15 Johns. Rep. 447; 6 Mass. 454; 
2 Mass. 125. 
     5. If the highway is impassable, the public have the right to pass over 
the adjacent soil; but this rule does not extend to private ways, without an 
express grant. Morg. Vad. Mec. 456-7; 1 Tho. Co. Lit. 275; note 1 Barton, 
Elem. Conv. 271; Yelv. 142, note 1. 
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
78 Moby Thesaurus words for "highway":
      Autobahn, US highway, alley, alleyway, arterial, arterial highway,
      arterial street, artery, autoroute, autostrada, avenue,
      belt highway, blind alley, boulevard, bypass, byway, camino real,
      carriageway, causeway, causey, chaussee, circumferential, close,
      corduroy road, county road, court, crescent, cul-de-sac,
      dead-end street, dike, dirt road, drag, drive, driveway,
      expressway, freeway, gravel road, highroad, highways and byways,
      interstate highway, lane, local road, main drag, main road, mews,
      motorway, parkway, path, pave, paved road, pike, place, plank road,
      primary highway, private road, right-of-way, ring road, road,
      roadbed, roadway, route nationale, row, royal road, secondary road,
      speedway, state highway, street, superhighway, terrace,
      thoroughfare, through street, thruway, toll road, township road,
      track, turnpike, way, wynd

    

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