Commute

Etymology
From commutare.

Verb

 * 1)  To travel from one's home (usually in the suburbs of a city) to one's workplace (usually in the city itself, or in another city) to go to work, or vice versa.
 * 2)  To engage in a commutative operation.
 * 3)  To pay out the lump-sum present value of an annuity.
 * 4)  To reduce the sentence previously given for a criminal offense.

Derived terms

 * commuter
 * commuting

Thesaurus
alternate, bandy, be quits with, change, change for, compensate, compound for, convert, cooperate, counterchange, course, cover ground, dub in, exchange, fare, fare forth, fetch, flit, flow, gang, get back at, get even with, give and take, give place to, go, go along, hie, interchange, logroll, make do with, make way for, metamorphose, move, move along, move on, offer in exchange, pass, pay back, permute, progress, put up with, reciprocate, redeem, requite, respond, retaliate, return, return the compliment, ring in, roll, roll on, run, sashay, shift with, stream, substitute, swap, switch, take in exchange, trade, transfer, transfigure, translate, transmogrify, transmute, transpose, travel, wayfare, wend

Translations

 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 通勤
 * Danish:
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish:
 * German:


 * Hungarian: ingázik
 * Italian: fare il pendolare
 * Japanese: 通う
 * Polish:
 * Russian:
 * Swedish:


 * German:, vertauschbar
 * Hungarian: kommutál, felcserélhető adjective


 * Russian: коммутировать
 * Swedish: