paving train - meaning and definition. What is paving train
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is paving train - definition

STONE OR TILE STRUCTURE WHICH CAN SERVE AS FLOOR; PAVEMENT TYPE WITH SOLID BLOCKS
Paver (flooring); Modular Paving; Interlocking concrete pavers; Paving stone (flooring); Paving stone; Paving-stone
  • Interlocking concrete paver driveway

train         
  • ''[[Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare]]'', by [[Claude Monet]], 1877, [[Art Institute of Chicago]]
  • China operates an extensive high speed rail network
  • This cab car includes a horn (top), a bell (top right), headlights (above the door), classification lights (red lights on side), and ditch lights (white lights on side)
  • US-style railroad truck (bogie) with [[journal bearing]]s
  • Stockton and Darlington special inaugural train 1825: six wagons of coal, directors coach, then people in wagons
  • A [[Tokyo Monorail]] train
  • The [[Union Pacific Big Boy]] locomotives represented the pinnacle of steam locomotive technology and power
  • double-stacked containers]] to be carried in [[well car]]s
  • Tampere, Finland]]
FORM OF RAIL TRANSPORT CONSISTING OF A SERIES OF CONNECTED VEHICLES
Trains; Trainset; Rail train; Guided train; Consist; Rail vehicles; Trainsets; Railway train; Local (Train); Passenger Trains; 🚆; Passenger services; Local (train); Train (rail transport); International Train; Consists; Train crew
I
n.
row of connected railroad cars
1) to drive a train
2) to shunt trains (onto different tracks)
3) to board, get on; catch; get off; miss; take a train (we took a train to the city)
4) to change trains (we'll have to change trains in Chicago)
5) to flag down; hold; stop a train (to stop a train by pulling the communication/emergency cord)
6) a boat; commuter; down (BE) ('from a city'); electric; elevated; express; freight (AE), goods (BE); hospital; inbound; local; long-distance; outbound; passenger; shuttle; slow (BE); stopping (BE); suburban; through; up (BE) ('to a city') train
7) a train arrives, pulls in; derails; leaves, pulls out; stops
8) a train for, to; from (the train from Exeter to London)
9) by train (to travel by train)
10) aboard, on a train (we met on the train)
column
11) a mule; supply; wagon train
mechanism for transmitting power
12) a power train
II
v.
1) (D; intr., tr.) to train for (to train for the Olympics)
2) (D; tr.) to train in (to train smb. in defensive driving)
3) (d; tr.) ('to aim') to train on (he trained his gun on the intruder)
4) (H) they were trained to react instantaneously to an attack; they trained the workers to be precise
train         
  • ''[[Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare]]'', by [[Claude Monet]], 1877, [[Art Institute of Chicago]]
  • China operates an extensive high speed rail network
  • This cab car includes a horn (top), a bell (top right), headlights (above the door), classification lights (red lights on side), and ditch lights (white lights on side)
  • US-style railroad truck (bogie) with [[journal bearing]]s
  • Stockton and Darlington special inaugural train 1825: six wagons of coal, directors coach, then people in wagons
  • A [[Tokyo Monorail]] train
  • The [[Union Pacific Big Boy]] locomotives represented the pinnacle of steam locomotive technology and power
  • double-stacked containers]] to be carried in [[well car]]s
  • Tampere, Finland]]
FORM OF RAIL TRANSPORT CONSISTING OF A SERIES OF CONNECTED VEHICLES
Trains; Trainset; Rail train; Guided train; Consist; Rail vehicles; Trainsets; Railway train; Local (Train); Passenger Trains; 🚆; Passenger services; Local (train); Train (rail transport); International Train; Consists; Train crew
I. n.
1.
Trail.
2.
Retinue, suite, staff, followers, body of attendants, cort?ge.
3.
Orderly company, procession.
4.
Series, succession, consecution, chain.
5.
Course, process, method, order.
6.
Line (as of cars connected with one another).
7.
Line of gunpowder.
8.
Persuasion, artifice, enticement, allurement, device, stratagem.
9.
Trap, lure.
10.
Tail of a bird.
II. v. a.
1.
Trail, draw, drag, haul, tug.
2.
Entice, allure, draw by persuasion.
3.
Educate, discipline, instruct, drill, form by practice, school, exercise.
4.
Break in, accustom, habituate, inure, use, familiarize.
III. v. n.
Drill, exercise, do military duty.
consist         
  • ''[[Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare]]'', by [[Claude Monet]], 1877, [[Art Institute of Chicago]]
  • China operates an extensive high speed rail network
  • This cab car includes a horn (top), a bell (top right), headlights (above the door), classification lights (red lights on side), and ditch lights (white lights on side)
  • US-style railroad truck (bogie) with [[journal bearing]]s
  • Stockton and Darlington special inaugural train 1825: six wagons of coal, directors coach, then people in wagons
  • A [[Tokyo Monorail]] train
  • The [[Union Pacific Big Boy]] locomotives represented the pinnacle of steam locomotive technology and power
  • double-stacked containers]] to be carried in [[well car]]s
  • Tampere, Finland]]
FORM OF RAIL TRANSPORT CONSISTING OF A SERIES OF CONNECTED VEHICLES
Trains; Trainset; Rail train; Guided train; Consist; Rail vehicles; Trainsets; Railway train; Local (Train); Passenger Trains; 🚆; Passenger services; Local (train); Train (rail transport); International Train; Consists; Train crew
(consists, consisting, consisted)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
Something that consists of particular things or people is formed from them.
Breakfast consisted of porridge served with butter.
VERB: V of n/-ing
2.
Something that consists in something else has that thing as its main or only part.
His work as a consultant consisted in advising foreign companies on the siting of new factories.
VERB: V in n/-ing

Wikipedia

Pavement (architecture)

Pavement, in construction, is an outdoor floor or superficial surface covering. Paving materials include asphalt, concrete, stones such as flagstone, cobblestone, and setts, artificial stone, bricks, tiles, and sometimes wood. In landscape architecture, pavements are part of the hardscape and are used on sidewalks, road surfaces, patios, courtyards, etc.

The term pavement comes from Latin pavimentum, meaning a floor beaten or rammed down, through Old French pavement. The meaning of a beaten-down floor was obsolete before the word entered English.

Pavement, in the form of beaten gravel, dates back before the emergence of anatomically modern humans. Pavement laid in patterns like mosaics were commonly used by the Romans.