Trolley - определение. Что такое Trolley
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Что (кто) такое Trolley - определение

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Trolleys; Trolly; Trolley (disambiguation); Drywall cart; Drywall Cart; Drywall Carts; Drywall carts
Найдено результатов: 127
trolley         
n.
small wheeled conveyance
(BE)
1) a (shopping) trolley (in a supermarket) (AE has shopping cart)
2) a tea trolley (AE has tea wagon)
3) a sweet trolley (in a restaurant)
streetcar, tram
(AE)
4) see streetcarUSAGE NOTE: Wheeled conveyances that are called trolleys in BE are often called carts in AE. In a library, books are moved on a trolley (BE) or on a cart (AE).
Trolley         
·noun ·Alt. of Trolly.
trolley         
(trolleys)
1.
A trolley is an object with wheels that you use to transport heavy things such as shopping or luggage. (BRIT; in AM, use cart
)
A porter relieved her of the three large cases she had been pushing on a trolley.
...supermarket trolleys.
N-COUNT
2.
A trolley is a small table on wheels which is used for serving drinks or food. (BRIT; in AM, use cart
)
N-COUNT
3.
A trolley is a bed on wheels for moving patients in hospital. (BRIT; in AM, use gurney
)
N-COUNT
4.
A trolley or trolley car is an electric vehicle for carrying people which travels on rails in the streets of a town. (AM; in BRIT, use tram
)
He took a northbound trolley on State Street.
= streetcar
N-COUNT
5.
If you say that someone is off their trolley, you mean that their ideas or behaviour are very strange. (BRIT INFORMAL)
= mad
PHRASE: usu v-link PHR
trolley         
¦ noun (plural trolleys)
1. Brit. a large wheeled metal basket or frame used for transporting items such as luggage or supermarket purchases.
a small table on wheels or castors, used especially to convey food and drink.
2. (also trolley wheel) a wheel attached to a pole, used for collecting current from an overhead electric wire to drive a tram.
3. short for trolleybus or trolley car.
Phrases
off one's trolley informal mad; insane.
Origin
C19: of dialect origin, perh. from troll2.
Trolley         
A grooved metallic pulley or set of pulleys which runs along an active wire of a circuit, a lead from which trolley goes to earth or connects with another wire, so that the trolley takes current generally for operating a street car motor placed upon the circuit leading from it; a rolling contact with an electric lead. Trolleys are principally used on electric railroads, and are now universally of the sub-wire system, being at the end of a pole which is inclined backward and forced upward by springs, so as to press the trolley against the bottom of the wire. Thus the trolley does not increase the sagging of the wire, but tends to push it up a little in its passage.
trolley bus         
  • A [[dual-mode bus]] operating as a trolleybus in the [[Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel]], in 1990
  • articulated]] trolleybus in Bucharest, Romania, in April 2007
  • archive-date=12 February 2006 }}</ref>
  • The "Elektromote", the world's first trolleybus,<ref>[http://www.siemens.com/history/en/innovations/transportation.htm#toc-2 ''Elektromote''], Siemens History website on 14 August 2015</ref> in Berlin, Germany, 1882
  • Video of a trolleybus in [[Ghent]], Belgium
  • Underground trolleybus in [[Kurobe Dam]]
  • articulated]] trolleybuses delivered to Geneva in 1992, which were among the first production-series low-floor trolleybuses
  • Reading]], England, 1966
  • A trolleybus in [[Qingdao]], China
  • Nob Hill]]
  • Tateyama]]
  • Bradford Trolleybus system]] was the last one to operate in the United Kingdom; closing in 1972.
  • Trolleybus wire switch (Type Soviet Union)
  • Beijing trolleybus]], the operator uses ropes to guide the trolley poles to contact the overhead wires.
  • Valparaíso]] (Chile)
  • Pole bases with springs and pneumatic pole lowering cylinders
  • Insulated poles, contact shoes, and pull&ndash;ropes
  • Solaris]] trolleybus in [[Landskrona]], Sweden
  • Vancouver trolleybus system]] completed the transition to an exclusively low-floor fleet in 2009.
  • low-floor]] designs.
  • MU]] [[ZiU-9]] in Soviet Union, 1987
  • Monument to [[Crimean Trolleybus]]
ELECTRIC BUS THAT DRAWS POWER FROM DUAL OVERHEAD WIRES
Electric trolleybus; Trolley bus; Trolley coach; Trolley-bus; Trolleybuses; Trackless trolley; Electric trolley bus; Trackless trolleys; All service vehicle; Trolley buses; 🚎; Tram like bus; Electric trolley buses; Trolleybus Magazine; IMC Electic bus
(trolley buses)
A trolley bus is a bus that is driven by electric power taken from cables above the street.
N-COUNT: also by N
Trolly         
·noun A truck from which the load is suspended in some kinds of cranes.
II. Trolly ·noun A narrow cart that is pushed by hand or drawn by an Animal.
III. Trolly ·noun A form of truck which can be tilted, for carrying railroad materials, or the like.
IV. Trolly ·noun A truck which travels along the fixed conductors, and forms a means of connection between them and a railway car.
trolleybus         
  • A [[dual-mode bus]] operating as a trolleybus in the [[Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel]], in 1990
  • articulated]] trolleybus in Bucharest, Romania, in April 2007
  • archive-date=12 February 2006 }}</ref>
  • The "Elektromote", the world's first trolleybus,<ref>[http://www.siemens.com/history/en/innovations/transportation.htm#toc-2 ''Elektromote''], Siemens History website on 14 August 2015</ref> in Berlin, Germany, 1882
  • Video of a trolleybus in [[Ghent]], Belgium
  • Underground trolleybus in [[Kurobe Dam]]
  • articulated]] trolleybuses delivered to Geneva in 1992, which were among the first production-series low-floor trolleybuses
  • Reading]], England, 1966
  • A trolleybus in [[Qingdao]], China
  • Nob Hill]]
  • Tateyama]]
  • Bradford Trolleybus system]] was the last one to operate in the United Kingdom; closing in 1972.
  • Trolleybus wire switch (Type Soviet Union)
  • Beijing trolleybus]], the operator uses ropes to guide the trolley poles to contact the overhead wires.
  • Valparaíso]] (Chile)
  • Pole bases with springs and pneumatic pole lowering cylinders
  • Insulated poles, contact shoes, and pull&ndash;ropes
  • Solaris]] trolleybus in [[Landskrona]], Sweden
  • Vancouver trolleybus system]] completed the transition to an exclusively low-floor fleet in 2009.
  • low-floor]] designs.
  • MU]] [[ZiU-9]] in Soviet Union, 1987
  • Monument to [[Crimean Trolleybus]]
ELECTRIC BUS THAT DRAWS POWER FROM DUAL OVERHEAD WIRES
Electric trolleybus; Trolley bus; Trolley coach; Trolley-bus; Trolleybuses; Trackless trolley; Electric trolley bus; Trackless trolleys; All service vehicle; Trolley buses; 🚎; Tram like bus; Electric trolley buses; Trolleybus Magazine; IMC Electic bus
¦ noun Brit. a bus powered by electricity obtained from overhead wires by means of a trolley wheel.
Trolleybus         
  • A [[dual-mode bus]] operating as a trolleybus in the [[Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel]], in 1990
  • articulated]] trolleybus in Bucharest, Romania, in April 2007
  • archive-date=12 February 2006 }}</ref>
  • The "Elektromote", the world's first trolleybus,<ref>[http://www.siemens.com/history/en/innovations/transportation.htm#toc-2 ''Elektromote''], Siemens History website on 14 August 2015</ref> in Berlin, Germany, 1882
  • Video of a trolleybus in [[Ghent]], Belgium
  • Underground trolleybus in [[Kurobe Dam]]
  • articulated]] trolleybuses delivered to Geneva in 1992, which were among the first production-series low-floor trolleybuses
  • Reading]], England, 1966
  • A trolleybus in [[Qingdao]], China
  • Nob Hill]]
  • Tateyama]]
  • Bradford Trolleybus system]] was the last one to operate in the United Kingdom; closing in 1972.
  • Trolleybus wire switch (Type Soviet Union)
  • Beijing trolleybus]], the operator uses ropes to guide the trolley poles to contact the overhead wires.
  • Valparaíso]] (Chile)
  • Pole bases with springs and pneumatic pole lowering cylinders
  • Insulated poles, contact shoes, and pull&ndash;ropes
  • Solaris]] trolleybus in [[Landskrona]], Sweden
  • Vancouver trolleybus system]] completed the transition to an exclusively low-floor fleet in 2009.
  • low-floor]] designs.
  • MU]] [[ZiU-9]] in Soviet Union, 1987
  • Monument to [[Crimean Trolleybus]]
ELECTRIC BUS THAT DRAWS POWER FROM DUAL OVERHEAD WIRES
Electric trolleybus; Trolley bus; Trolley coach; Trolley-bus; Trolleybuses; Trackless trolley; Electric trolley bus; Trackless trolleys; All service vehicle; Trolley buses; 🚎; Tram like bus; Electric trolley buses; Trolleybus Magazine; IMC Electic bus
A trolleybus (also known as trolley bus, trolley coach, trackless trolley, trackless tramin the 1910s and 1920sJoyce, J.; King, J.
trolley car         
  • tram in Budapest]] in 1908. The city established a network of electric trams in 1894.
  • A 3-way Hanning & Kahl point-setting system at [[Amsterdam Centraal station]]. It automatically sends trams arriving at stand A to the correct platform. The indicator on the right displays "Lijn 24, Spoor 4". The points are accordingly set to send the next tram, on route 24 to De Boelelaan/VU, into the platform 4 on the left. Meanwhile a tram 4 to RAI waits at platform 2.
  • Streetcar in [[Toledo, Ohio]], 1895
  • The only petrol-driven tram of [[Stockholms Spårvägar]], on line 19, in the 1920s
  • tram model]] built into it
  • APS]] track in [[Bordeaux]] with powered and neutral sections
  • Brühl]] marketplace, c. 1900
  • The [[Toronto streetcar system]] is the largest streetcar system in the [[Americas]].
  • 2016 ACT general elections.]]
  • A tram in [[Chengdu]], whose line forms a part of the [[Chengdu Metro]]. The city is one of several in China to invest in tram systems in the early 21st century.
  • [[Cologne Stadtbahn]] is the largest tram network in the [[European Union]].
  • mi}} of track in 1925.
  • New Orleans tram system]]. Trams typically have longer service life than internal combustion buses.
  • Gross-Lichterfelde Tram]] in 1882. Early electric trams operated by the company lacked [[overhead wire]]s, drawing current from the rails.
  • Portland]] that reads "go by streetcar". Trams are typically called streetcars in North America.
  • tram in Sydney]], 1894. The city saw Australia's first tram service open in 1860.
  • A horse-drawn tram operated by [[Swansea and Mumbles Railway]], 1870. Established in 1804, the railway service was the world's first.
  • PreMetro line E2]] is a tram network that has operated in [[Buenos Aires]] since 1987.
  • A painting of [[Auckland]] in 1889 with horse-drawn trams on the roadway.
  • The [[KTM-5]] tram vehicles were manufactured in Russia from 1969 to 1992.
  • City Star]] tram at longest intracity tram route in [[Kazan]]
  • A tram in [[Kolkata]], India
  • Melbourne Tram system in 1979. Melbourne remained the only city to operate a tram network in Australia through the 1970s.
  • Map of Melbourne's tram system in 2011. The tram system is the largest the world.
  • cable car service in Melbourne]], 1885. From its founding to 1940, Melbourne operated one of the largest cable car networks in the world.
  • A sign advising cyclists to dismount due to tram tracks. Tram tracks pose a hazard for cyclists, as their wheels may get caught in the track.
  • London and Blackwall]] cable-operated railway
  • Several trams in Toronto on a dedicated right of way lane. The tram in the left foreground is about to enter a portion of the tram network that operates in mixed traffic.
  • Osaki]], Japan.
  • Opened in 2001, the [[Portland Streetcar]] was the first (non-heritage) tram network established in North America in decades.
  • A modern design [[Škoda Artic]] tram in [[Tampere]], Finland, in 2022
  • Paris and Seine Tramway Company]], Pont de Puteaux, Paris, late 1890s
  • Saint Petersburg's tram system]] in 2022. The system was once the world's largest, before it was surpassed by Melbourne's system.
  • San Francisco cable car]] in 2008. The cable car's effectiveness in hilly environments partially explains its continued use in San Francisco.
  • With more than 14,000 units built, [[Tatra T3]] is the most widely produced tram models in history.
  • Cross section]] of a grooved tram rail
  • The driver's seat in the tram of the Russian model «Lvionok» («Lionet»)
  • Horse-drawn trams continued to be used in [[New York City]] until 1917.
  • Siemens tram in Almada near Lisbon
  • [[Overhead line]]s are used to provide power for most electric trams. Overhead wires are used for both trams and light rail systems.
  • tracks embedded in grass]] on the Timișoara Boulevard in [[Bucharest]], Romania
  • Countries without tram networks}}
  • The fragmented tram routes of Paris are slowly being joined up.
PUBLIC TRANSPORT VEHICLE RUNNING ON RAILS PREDOMINANTLY LOCATED ON STREETS
Streetcars; Electric street car; Street railway; Trolley car; Tramcars; Trams; Street cars; Streetcar; Street railroad; Trolley line; Tramcar; Tram system; Tram network; Streetcar line; Trolley (streetcar); Trolley (rail); Trolley (railway); Electric tram; Streetcar network; Surface car; Trolly Line; Tram-car; Tram-cars; Tram car; Tram cars; Electric streetcar; Steam tram-car; Trolleycar; Steam tramway; 🚊; 🚋; Street Railway; Cable-drawn; Tram service; Tramway car; Electric tramway; Double-ended tram; Single-ended tram; Battery tram; Street tramway; Town Tramway
¦ noun US a tram powered by electricity obtained from overhead wires by means of a trolley wheel.

Википедия

Trolley