Railway

  • 1Railway — Logo der Band Gründung 1977 Genre Hard Rock Aktuelle Besetzung Gesang Walter Wicha …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 2railway — ⇒RAILWAY, subst. masc. Vx. Chemin de fer. Nous attendons une heure le départ du railway pour Liverpool (MICHELET, Journal, 1834, p. 151). J ai repris le chemin de fer. Le rail way court sur une digue qui, d un côté, est battue par les lames du… …

    Encyclopédie Universelle

  • 3railway — rail‧way [ˈreɪlweɪ] noun [countable] 1. TRANSPORT TRAVEL a method of travelling or moving goods by train; = railroad AmE: • Britain s railways • ra …

    Financial and business terms

  • 4Railway — Разработчик Sim Games Дата выпуска 2011 Версия 1.0 Жанры Симуляторы …

    Википедия

  • 5railway — railway, railroad The usual word in BrE is railway, and in AmE railroad. Railroad is used in both varieties as a verb meaning ‘to coerce into a premature decision’ …

    Modern English usage

  • 6Railway — (engl., spr. rēl ŭē, auch Railroad, spr. rōd, »Schienenweg«), Eisenbahn …

    Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • 7railway — (n.) 1838 in modern sense, from RAIL (Cf. rail) (n.1) + WAY (Cf. way). Earlier used of any sort of road on which rails (originally wooden) were laid for easier transport, from 1776 …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 8railway — ► NOUN chiefly Brit. 1) a track made of rails along which trains run. 2) a system of such tracks with the trains, organization, and personnel required for its working …

    English terms dictionary

  • 9railway — [rāl′wā΄] n. 1. any track with rails for guiding wheels; specif., a road laid with parallel steel rails along which run passenger cars that are lighter than railroad cars 2. RAILROAD …

    English World dictionary

  • 10Railway — Railroad Rail road (r[=a]l r[=o]d ), Railway Rail way (r[=a]l w[=a] ), n. 1. A road or way consisting of one or more parallel series of iron or steel rails, patterned and adjusted to be tracks for the wheels of vehicles, and suitably supported on …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English