Dictionary
railway train
noun
A locomotive plus the carriages that it pulls along a railway track.
Exact(28)
A railway train careers through a tempest, its purpose unknowable, its creator a modern son of Vulcan.
4. Every time someone got on a Docklands Light Railway train in 2006/7, it cost TfL £1.28, total subsidy £78.5m. 5.
That statement has trilled through my head all week like a snatch of Berlioz blasting out of a mobile phone in a crowded railway train.
The TGV, France's homegrown high-speed railway train, has just reached the dazzling world-beating speed of 575 kph (357 mph) on the new line from Paris to Strasbourg.
The always soon-to-open H Street streetcar, a multimillion dollar "cool" boondoggle that combines the charm of a slow-moving bus with the steering manoeuvrability of a railway train, will only increase the area's cachet.I would mock further.
"Given that performance is the key factor that underpins most passengers' general view of the railway, train companies and Network Rail must keep striving to get more trains on time".
Similar(32)
The Borders Railway trains will be basic, however.
Caterpillar and GE, two large engineering companies, are both working on natural-gas-powered railway trains.
As a result, Heathrow Express services will be suspended for six days and Great Western Railway trains will terminate at Ealing Broadway.
Along the route of the Trans-Siberian Railway, trains of oil tank cars extend across the landscape for miles.
He was equally fascinated by railway trains, which gave passengers unprecedented access to moving pictures, an ever-changing panorama framed by the carriage window.
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