A special Recursive Effect separate from the main video path, where selected or keyed fragments of previous images are repeated infinitely usually with a small positional offset and a change in video parameters. The live image is normally in the foreground.
a beaten track or blazed path
A cleared path, beaten track, or improved surface, as through woods or wilderness, not usually trafficked by vehicles because of width, seasonal conditions, or access restrictions. (DOI3)
Path worn by repeated movement of animals along a route, typically the result of numerous trackways.
a path or track roughly blazed through wild or hilly country
a different thing altogether and that is where the Jeep comes into its elements and the Safari feels a tad uncomfortable
a path that is left behind from the one who has traveled through that place before
a unique path among the documents on your web server, followed during one or more visits
a unique path among the web pages on a site, followed by one or more visitors to the web server
a walk that allows repeated vertices but not edges
a walk with no repeated edges
A path laid out, developed, and maintained by a land management agency such as the U.S. Forest Service. Trails usually have signs, a wide tread, switchbacks, and waterbars to direct water off the tread. See also Use-Trail and Route.
Term used to describe a track or foot path, especially when used in a ski-touring context
Route on land or water with protected status and public access for recreation or transportation purposes such as walking, jogging, motorcycling, hiking, bicycling, ATVing, horseback riding, mountain biking, canoeing, kayaking, and backpacking.
The short-term luminous glow left in the path of a meteor, a.k.a. a wake. Trails lasting more than one second are referred to as trains.
route for passage from one point to another; does not include roads or highways (jeep trail, path, ski trail).
An ambiguous term - it is better to use either path or train.
A "trail" is a unique path among the documents on the web server, followed by one or more visitors to the web server. Every visit to the web server follows a trail. Commonly followed trails represent useful information about the preferred routes that your visitors follow. The most commonly followed trails, above a minimum length determined by the Top Trails Report: Minimum Steps (trailminimumsteps) option, are reported as part of the Chart Top Trails (trails) report.
A trail is a pedestrian path or road mainly used for walking, but often also for cycling, cross-country skiing or other activities. Some trails are off-limits to everyone other than hikers, and few trails allow motorized vehicles.