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  1. Dictionary
    heavy traffic
  2. adjective A2. Something that is heavy weighs a lot. [...] heaviness uncountable noun. See full entry for 'heavy' Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Definition of 'traffic' traffic. (træfɪk ) uncountable noun [oft the NOUN] A2.

    • American

      HEAVY TRAFFIC meaning | Definition, pronunciation,...

    • Heavy Type

      Printing type that is thicker and blacker than normal...

    • Gadgetry

      2 meanings: 1. gadgets collectively 2. use of or...

  3. Oct 14, 2020 · Traffic congestion is a state wherein transport is slowed, and more vehicles are queueing on a given road. Though congestion is a possibility regardless of what mode of transport you’re using, we’ll focus only on the current automobile road traffic here in the Philippines.

  4. the number of vehicles moving along roads, or the amount of aircraft, trains, or ships moving along a route: heavy/a lot of traffic There was heavy /a lot of traffic on the roads this morning. stuck in traffic We got stuck in traffic for several hours.

  5. Define Heavy Traffic. means the use of a highway by a vehicle, object or contrivance for moving loads having a gross weight including the vehicle, object or contrivance and load in excess of five (5) tonnes:

  6. Aug 25, 2023 · (SPOT.ph) Feeling frustrated with the never-ending heavy traffic situation in the Philippines? Here’s a different take from one of President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr.’s advisers who claimed that heavy traffic is an indicator of a thriving economy.

  7. (of a place or area) where a lot of people pass through or where people pass through very often: Surveillance cameras have been installed near high-traffic shopping and dining locations. Schools were required to inform students by posting a notice in a high traffic area.

  8. Meaning. traffics that's congested and moving slowly. For example. Barry always blames the heavy traffic when he's late for work. The traffic wouldn't have been anywhere near that heavy if it hadn't rained. Note: A similar collocation is "bad traffic", and a collocation with the opposite meaning is "light traffic" Quick Quiz.