
TRAFFIC VOCABULARY

Rush Hour: one of the very busy times of the day on roads, trains, etc.,
Sentence: It took him 45 minutes to reach the office because of the rush hour

Commute: travel some distance between one’s home and place of work on a regular basis.
Sentence: She commutes to work daily by metro
TRAFFIC VOCABULARY

Round-about: on all sides or in all directions.
Sentence: You should drive slowly at roundabouts

Congestion: a situation in which a place is too blocked or crowded, causing difficulties
Sentence: The congestion on this route is very bad during the rainy season

Traffic Lights: one of a set of red, yellow, and green lights that control the movement of vehicles,
Sentence: You should only move when the traffic lights are green
TRAFFIC VOCABULARY

Pedestrian: a person walking rather than travelling in a vehicle.
Sentence: The life of pedestrians is very tough as they don’t have a place to call home

Intersection: a point at which two or more things intersect, especially a road junction.
Sentence: The next intersection is 10Km ahead

Bottleneck: a narrow section of road or a junction that impedes traffic flow.
Sentence: She pushed everyone full speed ahead until production hit a bottleneck

Gridlock: a situation of very severe traffic
Sentence: They were caught in a gridlock
TRAFFIC VOCABULARY

Obstruction: a thing that impedes or prevents passage or progress; an obstacle or blockage.
Sentence: The fallen trees have created an obstruction on the road

Stoppage: a blockage in a narrow passage, such as the barrel of a gun.
Sentence: There have been more than 10 minutes of stoppages.

Queue: a line or sequence of people or vehicles awaiting their turn to be attended to or to proceed.
Sentence: Everybody has to stand in the queue and wait for their turn

Tailback: a long queue of stationary or slow-moving traffic extending back from a busy junction
Sentence: There’s a 2km tailback on the city highway because of an accident
