If you are a truck-driver or salesman a travelling steady is your bit on the side and is used in preference when you are on the road as opposed to your fixed steady who is at home supposedly cleaning house, rearin' your rugrats and drinking all your booze.
it all depends on how fast you are travelling. if you are travelling at a steady 60 mph, then it would take 3 1/2 hours.
if you are a beam of light, travelling 300,000 km/s, you can do it in about 8 minutes. If you are a car travelling at a steady 100 km/h (62 mph), it would take 171 years
That would depend on where in the world you are measuring or travelling from, and if you are travelling, it would depend on what way you were travelling.
You would be travelling south.
When a car is travelling at a steady speed, the driving force from the engine is equal to the total resistive forces acting against the car, such as air resistance and friction. This balance of forces allows the car to maintain a constant velocity without accelerating or decelerating.
You have a blown head gasket i would not drive it until it has been fixed
There is no definitive answer as it could be a matter of preference, however... I am on the road between Leicester and London would be correct, as you are travelling between two fixed points. Ravi is sitting in between Sam and Ram is most likely to be correct, as it indicates that Ravi is currently occupying a space between Sam and Ram.
You have been travelling is correct. You would never say you have been on travelling, although for poetic emphasis you could say you have been travelling on.
If you were travelling from Georgia to Mississippi you would be travelling west.
They would be travelling west to east
Your career preference is the career field in which you prefer. For example, if you prefer to be a teacher as a profession, then that would be your career preference.
No. Steady is an adjective. The adverb form would be steadily.