From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhitchhikehitch‧hike /ˈhɪtʃhaɪk/ ●○○ (also hitch) verb [intransitive] TTCTRAVELto travel to places by getting free rides from drivers of passing carshitchhike around/to/across etc She spent her gap year hitchhiking around the world. —hitchhiker noun [countable] I picked up a hitchhiker on our way back.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
hitchhike• It was a warm and beautiful day for hitchhiking.• He spent his Rhodes scholarship money on books, hitchhiking around Britain and trips to London, where he joined anti-war rallies.• We had to hitchhike back to San Francisco.• I had to sell it for what I could get, which was five bucks, and start hitchhiking home.• I hitchhiked, I traveled on foot, I rode the rails.• I had three hundred and sixty-five miles yet to hitchhike to New York, and a dime in my pocket.• I picked her up hitchhiking with another woman and two men.hitchhike around/to/across etc• He spent his Rhodes scholarship money on books, hitchhiking around Britain and trips to London, where he joined anti-war rallies.• He was remembered for cutting a few weeks' classes to hitchhike across country.• I had three hundred and sixty-five miles yet to hitchhike to New York, and a dime in my pocket.• Well, perhaps Warner had seen her waiting for a bus or hitchhiking to the inaugural and generously gave her a lift.