leave no trace
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Coined around the 1960s.
Verb
[edit]leave no trace (third-person singular simple present leaves no trace, present participle leaving no trace, simple past and past participle left no trace)
- To follow certain outdoor ethical guidelines while camping, etc., so thoroughly that it would appear as though one had never previously been there, for the sake of nature conservation.
- Synonym: LNT
- 2017 May 22, Jerry Chester, “Castlemorton Common: The rave that changed the law”, in BBC News[1]:
- "Although people don't think it, the traveller ethos at free festivals was "leave no trace"—you went there, you had a party you cleaned up.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see leave, no, trace.