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Discover LudwigThe phrase "elevated line" is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it as a noun to refer to a railway line or track which runs in a higher position than the surrounding area, typically on an embankment or through a cutting. For example, "London's East London Line is an elevated line which runs through the northern part of the city."
Exact(30)
Ogilvy had proposed to change that with an elevated line that would not be ugly.
The site was a car barn for Third Avenue streetcars, not for the elevated line.
The elevated line, which opened in 1934, rose to 30 feet (9 metres) above street level.
The Bohemian Hall and Park, at 29th Street and 24th Avenue, a block off the elevated line, is a fine summertime place to socialize.
In the 1860s, he again took up architecture and in early 1878 was selected to design the stations, at a fee of $200,000, along the elevated line.
The new car, composed of three flexible compartments, constituted the whole train, and ran on the elevated line from Park Row to Lefferts Avenue, Queens.
Similar(30)
The fire destroyed the businesses in a block of one-story commercial buildings in the shadow of the elevated subway line.
First, suppose that all of the physical equipment and structures — the tunnels and stations and elevated lines, the signals and cars and elevators — were worth $50 billion in 1980.
Tells about Boss Tweed's attempt to have the elevated lines condemned and removed.
People regularly talk on cellphones in trains and on platforms on the elevated lines.
The Elevated lines stopped serving Manhattan in May , 1955 and were soon torn down.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com