We have no meanings for "making a voyage" in our records yet.
1 I was bought by a sailor, and here I am making a voyage !
2 Later, he travelled in Europe and the East, making a voyage round the world.
3 Gathered fame by making a voyage with some dead ones.
4 A ship making a voyage is an army waging war.
5 All Christians pretend to be making a voyage heaven-ward, and that is only home-ward.
6 He thought of making a voyage to London for the purpose of looking after his accounts.
7 Sailors are tried much in the same way, I fancy, as you will learn when making a voyage .
8 Thus he would linger along the great river and wish he might find an opportunity of making a voyage .
9 He had just now achieved a great feat, making a voyage from the Grampian Hills to the Orkney Islands.
10 I went out in the Sally again, making a voyage to Matanzas and back, without any accident, or incident, worth mentioning.
11 Accompanied by a few friends, he visited the source of the Thames, making a voyage in a wherry from Windsor to Crichlade.
12 In one of the many beautiful spots which the traveller sees in making a voyage up the Hudson, stands the village of M--.
13 We then took Duppo down to the canoe, and I tried to explain to him our intention of making a voyage in her.
14 Many years ago I was making a voyage , when my ship caught fire, and I-withthe officers and crew-escaped in three of the boats.
15 However, it was agreed that before the stormy weather came on, their little vessel should be employed in making a voyage round the island.
16 After several voyages, I accepted an offer from Captain W. Pritchard, master of the "Antelope," who was making a voyage to the South Sea.
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This collocation consists of: Making a voyage through the time
Making a voyage across language varieties