From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishnavigationnav‧i‧ga‧tion /ˌnævəˈɡeɪʃən/ ●○○ noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
navigation• Frames can be useful for maintaining a navigation bar, but all permanent frames consume screen real estate.• There's a medical officer, a navigation officer, a communications officer.• an electronic navigation system• In Medieval times rivers were used for water supply and to power mills as well as for navigation.• But the Flicker is used by freighters with full-automatic Intelloid navigation.• Precision Products makes navigation and guidance systems for military and space purposes.• The voyage was an achievement of navigation and courage.• In the navigation room Colonel Bowers pored over his flight-plan and a sandwich lunch.• The fecundity of adult Jerichos must be legend, the navigation abilities of the larvae extraordinary.• The channel is now open to navigation.