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View definitions for go on tour

go on tour

verb as in barnstorm

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During their summer vacations, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Neil Gorsuch did what all Supreme Court justices do every few years when the court is in recess: go on tour to promote a book.

From Slate

In a Monday appearance on the season premiere of “Sherri,” Blige told host Sherri Shepherd that she will go on tour in January and has a new album on the way, “Gratitude,” which drops Nov. 15.

Pepsi had gotten to a person who got to a person who knew me, and they were wondering if I’d go on tour.

I get the phone book out — it’s 1989, so it was a physical phone book — and I called Joe Walsh: “Man, they’re asking me to go on tour. I don’t have a band. You wanna be in the band?”

She wrote, "I was completely terrified to go on tour this time because I didn’t know how we were going to keep 3 million fans safe over seven months."

From Salon

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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