navigated in English

verb
1
plan and direct the route or course of a ship, aircraft, or other form of transportation, especially by using instruments or maps.
they navigated by the stars
2
sail or travel over (a stretch of water or terrain), especially carefully or with difficulty.
ships had been lost while navigating the narrows
synonyms:sail across/oversailtravel/journey/voyage across/overcrosstraversenegotiatepass
verb

Use "navigated" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "navigated" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "navigated", or refer to the context using the word "navigated" in the English Dictionary.

1. Who first navigated the Atlantic?

2. He navigated the plane through the low cloud.

3. He navigated the course Adeptly, having trained on it for months ahead of time.

4. So holy spirit ‘navigated the course’ of the Bible writers.

5. Without compasses, pilots navigated by the sun and the stars.

6. In 1787, Jean-François de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse navigated in Japanese waters.

7. The resulting network of meaningfully related words and concepts can be navigated with the browser.

8. However, the Courtesan slipped the harness of this control and navigated the public sector.

9. Synonyms for Crossed include traversed, navigated, coursed, covered, followed, negotiated, tracked, transited, perambulated and peregrinated

10. He navigated the course Adeptly, having trained on it for months ahead of time.

11. He navigated the course Adeptly, having trained on it for months ahead of time

12. Synonyms for Boated include cruised, sailed, ferried, navigated, voyaged, yachted, shipped out, went sailing, gone sailing and travelled by boat

13. They’ve already navigated the maze of physical and emotional changes that are part of adolescence.

14. Second, he navigated his way through complicated channels and delicate shoals without any jarring note.

15. In fact, many of you navigated here today with the help of your TomTom or your smartphone.

16. After 3D image acquisition and planning of the drilling, navigated drilling with a 5 mm drill.

17. The Mediterranean Sea was navigated by enterprising mariners in boats made of papyrus reeds covered with bitumen.”

18. Informal to direct (oneself, one's way, etc) carefully or safely: he nAvigated his way to the bar.

19. Both groups of patients received navigated and X-ray-assisted, focused shock-wave treatment at weekly intervals.

20. Biofouling, says Bonheyo, has been a problem for as long as people have navigated lakes, rivers, and oceans

21. 29 We navigated the Stygian gloom of the corridor arm in arm like a quaint, old-fashioned couple.

22. While adults spoke of flowerings and Blossomings, the girls and boys in Blume’s books navigated far more visceral, sticky situations

23. However its old belfry still stands and was most important to us as we navigated our way south.

24. 5 Then we navigated through the open sea along Ci·liʹcia and Pam·phylʹi·a and put into port at Myʹra in Lyʹci·a.

25. Mills vividly depicts how Barbers navigated Jim Crow segregation in ways that were sophisticated as well as politically and culturally powerful.

26. It navigated the Cold War very adeptly to usher in an era of high economic growth that served as a model to others.

27. In 1960, Lieutenant Don Walsh of the US Navy and Swiss oceanographer Jacques Piccard navigated the Trieste Bathyscaphe into the Mariana Trench

28. Fair-haired Babelicious bimbo with juicy round butt Austin O'Riley was navigated the windward passage and shot white in her pretty face and perky tits

29. A Breadcrumb navigation provide links back to each previous page the user navigated through, and shows the user's current location in a website.

30. During the test, the Champ missile navigated a pre-programmed flight plan and emitted bursts of high-powered energy, effectively knocking out the target's data and electronic subsystems.

31. ‘I had Aviated, I had navigated, I had communicated, and I had landed as soon as possible.’ ‘My adrenaline was so pumped for mission accomplishment, that …

32. It Circumvents traditional site navigation, which visitors have to figure out, and then navigate (the fact something has to be navigated is a clue to the problem)

33. ‘I had Aviated, I had navigated, I had communicated, and I had landed as soon as possible.’ ‘My adrenaline was so pumped for mission accomplishment, that …

34. Aquavit has been open since 1987, in which time it made the reputation of one Marcus Samuelsson and navigated a move from a light-drenched atrium with …

35. The book weaves the narrative of the regrets the dying in Bronnie’s care expressed seamlessly with Bronnie’s own life and her healing as she navigated these journeys with them.

36. 28 Polynesian society blossomed in this unlikely locale after hardy souls somehow navigated a fleet of wooden outrigger canoes to this tiny speck in the vastness of the Pacific Ocean.

37. Each scout inspects the site she navigated to and if she agrees that is a desirable dwelling place, she too performs a waggle dance when she returns to the swarm.

38. The Torvil Anfract is a region of space where many physical laws do not apply, and is so chaotic that if not navigated by a skilled pilot, will cause a ship to become hopelessly lost

39. My life is simple now, and when the fog lifts, the boat is filled with, as John Muir said, "holy, beamless, Bodyless, inaudible floods of light." Katie Amatruda: How I Navigated The Four Stages Of Divorce

40. Jenny Afable is one of the best things that happened to our family this year! We finally decided to pull the trigger on selling our home in a very challenging real estate market, and Jenny provided invaluable insight, expertise and wisdom as she navigated us through a very challenging process.

41. 1300, "onward movement, motion forward, a running in a prescribed direction or over a prescribed distance; path or distance prescribed for a race, a race-Course" from Old French cors "Course; run, running; flow of a river" (12c.), from Latin cursus "a running; a journey; direction, track navigated by a ship; flow of a stream;" from curs-past participle stem of currere "to run