Viâ
Origin
From Latin viÄ, ablative singular form of via ("wayâ€, “road").
Full definition of viâ
Preposition
- (British spelling)
- 1886: Comte De Paris, The Battle of Gettysburg, page 248http://books.google.com/books?id=woP8IV7zHGwC&pg=PA248:Stahel's calvary division moved from Warrington, viâ Gainesville, to Fairfax Court-house.
- 1907: Karl Baedeker, Paris and environs: with routes from London to Paris; handbook for travellers, page 32http://books.google.com/books?id=etBCAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA32:To the right are the Lignes de Normandie (England viâ Dieppe or Le Havre).
- 1912: Claudius Madrolle, Northern China, the Valley of the Blue River, Korea, page 386 (2
- The foundries produced, in 1909, 74,000 tons of pig-iron which were exported viâ Shang-hai to Japan and even to America.