From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishonwardon‧ward /ˈɒnwəd $ ˈɑːnwərd, ˈɒːn-/ adjective [only before noun]TTFORWARDmoving forward or continuing
The company offers flights to Amsterdam with onward travel to The Hague.
the onward march of scienceExamples from the Corpusonward• Her thoughts were so jumbled that they could only drive her onward.• At the time, GeoRef covered the period from 1969 onward, and GeoArchive from 1974 onward.• Given his rate of drift, within ten or fifteen minutes the home-base would passonward beneath him.• the onwardmarch of scientificprogress• His life has a sense of purposive onwardmovement.• There was great discussion about the onwardroute.• The parquet is responsible for the onwardtransmission of the documents via central government agencies.• tickets for onwardtravel• From the age of six onward, Vologsky had been able to apply almost totalrecall to figures of any sort.onward march• If the onward march of globalisation can not be halted, the case for a more effectiveregionalpolicy has become unassailable.• It's as if he has been holding up the onward march of history, and history can not wait.• For more than a centuryfactory acts and ever shorter working hours marked the onward march of industrial progress.• PracticalgardeningOrganic gardening continues its onward march through our bookcases.