Itinerary
来自Big Physics
late Middle English: from late Latin itinerarium, neuter of itinerarius ‘of a journey or roads’, from Latin iter, itiner- ‘journey, road’.
wiktionary
From Late Latin itinerarius(“pertaining to a journey”), neuter itinerārium(“an account of a journey, a road-book”), from iter(“a way, journey”); see itinerate, itinerant.
etymonline
itinerary (n.)
mid-15c., "route of travel," from Late Latin itinerarium "account of a journey, description of a route of travel, road-book," noun use of neuter of itinerarius "of a journey," from Latin itineris "a journey," from ire "go" (from PIE root *ei- "to go"). By early 15c. it meant "record of a journey;" extended sense "sketch of a proposed route, list of places to be included in a journey" is from 1856.