From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtraditiontra‧di‧tion /trəˈdɪʃən/ ●●●S2W2 noun1TRADITION[countable, uncountable] a belief, custom, or way of doing something that has existed for a long time, or these beliefs, customs etc in general
the traditions of South East Asia
the tradition that the eldest son inherits the propertyBy tradition, it’s the bride’s parents who pay for the wedding.► see thesaurus at habit2 →(be) in the tradition of somebody/somethingCOLLOCATIONSADJECTIVES/NOUN + traditiona long traditionThis country has a long tradition of accepting political refugees.a time-honoured/long-standing tradition (=a long tradition)In time-honoured tradition, they have a drink in every pub along the high street.a strong traditionThere is a strong tradition of sport at the school.an old/ancient traditionIn rural Wales, the old traditions persisted.a family traditionAccording to family tradition, he must sing at his own wedding.a cultural/religious traditioncultural traditions that date back many generationsa local traditionThe villagers are all keen to preserve local traditions.American/British/Western etc traditionThe festival is a part of the Scottish tradition which is worth preserving.verbsfollow a tradition (=do what has been done before)He followed the family tradition and became a doctor.maintain/carry on/continue/uphold a tradition (=make a tradition continue in the same way or at the same standard as before)We maintain a tradition of cider making dating from Norman times.break with tradition (=not follow a tradition)Why not break with tradition and study at Leeds, say, or London, instead of Oxford?establish a traditionThey are continuing a tradition established by the firm’s Victorian founder.be steeped in tradition (=have many traditions)It is an area of the country steeped in tradition.Examples from the Corpustradition• The region has a tradition of winemaking which goes back to Roman times.• Once claimed, the spots are protected by tradition -- and fear.• By tradition, it is the bride's parents who pay for the wedding.• They come from very different Christiantraditions.• We always go for a long walk on Christmas morning - it's a family tradition.• a family tradition• The great cantors developed their own special variations on the liturgy, largely on the basis of folktradition.• There was a place for tradition but it was not here.• There is great respect for tradition among the older members of the community.• They imposeliturgicaltraditions, organisational structures, communication methods and leadershipmodels which are alien to their environment.• There is a lot of traditionconnected to this school.• A lot of the old traditions are dying out.• Every village has its own traditions.• Out of which great religious or philosophicaltradition does the call of compassion come to you?• There was a long-standingtradition of professionalism, which centred around jockeys and pugilists for the most part.• Of course that's not to say that tradition doesn't have a place.• These little creatures are mostly white, in the tradition of the popular white child-like Snowbabies.• It's still the tradition here that the eldest soninherits all the family's money and land.tradition that• Celticmusic has a resonance, a tradition that somehow speaks to people of all nationalities.• And it's a tradition thatsustains the pre-eminence of the seven-car S-class range.• The ads continue a NutraSweet celebritytradition that has included Cher and Lauren Hutton.• This magnificentabundanceestablished one tradition that we are still struggling to overcome.• The tradition that you came from often looked askance at constitutions, regarding them as mere pieces of paper.Origintradition(1300-1400)Old FrenchLatintraditio“act of handing over”; → TRAITOR