Stopover in a sentence as a noun

More that it was a stopover to get some cash in an economy where you might need it and a place where cost of living is high.

I've often hacked Kayak by booking flights to other destinations with a stopover at the place I want to go. It's bizarre, but yes, they're sometimes cheaper.

There's also no guarantee that you'll keep your stopover city—you could get rerouted through another hub and would have no recourse.

Last week also forced the Bolivian president Evo Morales stopover in Austria when there was suspicion that Snowden was aboard his aircraft.

This reminds me of the US arrests that occurred regarding overseas poker sites when their executives got pulled off a plane that was making a stopover in the US en route to Central America.

Even France proved to a vasall in forcing the Bolivian president's aircraft to make an unplanned stopover in Vienna and even the neutral countries are full in favor of surveillance Switzerland for example is just revising its surveillance laws and many other legal areas, for example copyright, see an increased level of surveilance too.

Not sure if it applies to this particular one, but there are a lot of pricing quirks in international, multi-airline itineraries that one can exploit: airline fare rules are fairly complex lists of requirements/exclusion/combination/stopover rules etc., and the combinatorial complexity and ancient IT infrastructure it's all coded in sometimes produces results the airlines might not have intended had they realized it.

Stopover definitions

noun

a stopping place on a journey; "there is a stopover to change planes in Chicago"

noun

a brief stay in the course of a journey; "they made a stopover to visit their friends"

See also: stop layover