a. rare. [f. L. viātōri-us, f. viātor: see prec. and -ORIAL.] Of or pertaining to travelling.

1

[1767.  A. Campbell, Lexiph. (1774), 54. We continued our viatorial progression through the royal perambulations.]

2

1816.  Keatinge, Trav., I. 5. As to France and Flanders, if ever a subject were exhausted of viatorial novelty, this is the case with regard to these countries.

3

  Hence Viatorially adv.

4

1880.  Daily Tel., 22 Nov., 5/4. The Americans, viatorially considered, are the most patient and long-suffering people in the whole world.

5