No. The meaning is that you travel around the world, or to various places.
But verbs such as to travel, to drive, to sail, or to cross traditionally have objects that are not actually direct.
Examples:
"He drives the same route every day." (down or along the road)
"He sails the seven seas." (across)
"He crossed the road to his farm." (went across)
"If I were rich, I would travel the world." In this sentence, "were" is in the subjunctive mood as it expresses a hypothetical situation.
Example sentence for the verb 'travel':When we take our trip, we will travel by train.Example sentence for the noun 'travel':The hotel was lovely but the travel to get there was rough.
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.
There is nothing wrong with that sentence.
She said, "Mr Johnson never did anything wrong to me" which carried the innuendo that he had done something wrong to someone else.
"When I win the lottery I will happily travel the world at the drop of a hat."
It was due to his motility that he could travel the world without any difficulty?
There is no wrong with sentence to end with also. For example, We can do this work also.
In the sentence, "In your opinion the president was wrong about that." "that" is a pronoun. Its antecedent is presumably in a preceding sentence.
The answer I gave was wrong.
it sounds wrong and its incorrect english
Nothing is wrong with that