释义 |
Definition of streetcar in English: streetcarnoun ˈstriːtkɑːˈstritˌkɑr North American A tram. 〈北美〉有轨电车 Example sentencesExamples - In the 1990 afternoon rush hour, there were 207 streetcars in service; in 2001, only 152, a drop of more than 25 per cent.
- Both of these new lines used newly built streetcars designed to resemble the antique cars on the St. Charles line.
- My opposition to the streetcars has five points.
- This last detail reminds you why few really wept when the streetcars were replaced with buses.
- They also ride buses and streetcars carrying students to and from school.
- Every day hundreds of streetcars, buses and subway cars are dangerously overcrowded during rush hour, yet do their operators get charged?
- On Monday morning, Edmontonians woke up to find no streetcars or taxis operating, city hall closed and police and fire patrols limited.
- Electricity changed all that in the late 19th Century, powering streetcars and interurban cars connecting rural and urban areas throughout Canada.
- A half an hour or so later a young man disembarked from a streetcar and walked into the nearby Desplaines Police Station.
- One goal is to increase the link between public transit and bikes, by attaching bike racks to buses and streetcars and installing secure parking facilities at subway and train stations.
- Toronto has a clean, efficient public transportation system composed of the subway, buses and streetcars.
- Gustafson said streetcars attract more urban development than bus routes.
- For example, city transportation in Tallinn includes buses, trolleys, and streetcars.
- But at least it's not like Toronto, where the streetcar or bus drivers don't carry any change.
- Maybe you sat watching the window because there was a pretty girl who always got off the streetcar when it stopped there after four.
- Although the streetcars have a historic ambience, the operators have modern equipment at their disposal, such as radios and telephones and more contemporary fare collection equipment.
- When someone is sitting next to you on the streetcar, then rises to take a single seat that opens up, should this offend you?
- Their fellow Muscovites taunted them on the sidewalks and on the streetcars, loudly criticizing their appearance, hurling insults at them, sometimes attacking them.
- I rode into the city by subway and saw the crowds of badge-sporting, flag-waving kids become denser, packing buses, streetcars, and roads closed for streaming parades of pilgrims on foot.
- I've often noticed the Market Street streetcars because they've returned a number of restored antique cars to operation.
Definition of streetcar in US English: streetcarnounˈstrētˌkärˈstritˌkɑr North American another term for trolley car Example sentencesExamples - They also ride buses and streetcars carrying students to and from school.
- Toronto has a clean, efficient public transportation system composed of the subway, buses and streetcars.
- A half an hour or so later a young man disembarked from a streetcar and walked into the nearby Desplaines Police Station.
- This last detail reminds you why few really wept when the streetcars were replaced with buses.
- My opposition to the streetcars has five points.
- Every day hundreds of streetcars, buses and subway cars are dangerously overcrowded during rush hour, yet do their operators get charged?
- Maybe you sat watching the window because there was a pretty girl who always got off the streetcar when it stopped there after four.
- When someone is sitting next to you on the streetcar, then rises to take a single seat that opens up, should this offend you?
- But at least it's not like Toronto, where the streetcar or bus drivers don't carry any change.
- One goal is to increase the link between public transit and bikes, by attaching bike racks to buses and streetcars and installing secure parking facilities at subway and train stations.
- Although the streetcars have a historic ambience, the operators have modern equipment at their disposal, such as radios and telephones and more contemporary fare collection equipment.
- Gustafson said streetcars attract more urban development than bus routes.
- In the 1990 afternoon rush hour, there were 207 streetcars in service; in 2001, only 152, a drop of more than 25 per cent.
- I rode into the city by subway and saw the crowds of badge-sporting, flag-waving kids become denser, packing buses, streetcars, and roads closed for streaming parades of pilgrims on foot.
- I've often noticed the Market Street streetcars because they've returned a number of restored antique cars to operation.
- Electricity changed all that in the late 19th Century, powering streetcars and interurban cars connecting rural and urban areas throughout Canada.
- Their fellow Muscovites taunted them on the sidewalks and on the streetcars, loudly criticizing their appearance, hurling insults at them, sometimes attacking them.
- For example, city transportation in Tallinn includes buses, trolleys, and streetcars.
- Both of these new lines used newly built streetcars designed to resemble the antique cars on the St. Charles line.
- On Monday morning, Edmontonians woke up to find no streetcars or taxis operating, city hall closed and police and fire patrols limited.
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