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Definition of Foot traffic
1. Noun. People coming and going on foot.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Foot Traffic
Literary usage of Foot traffic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Law Journal Reports: New Series (1882)
"Where after the passing of this Act it is intended by any person to form or lay
out any road, passage, or way for building as a street for foot traffic only ..."
2. The Weekly Reporter by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Great Britain Privy Council (1896)
"The respondents contended, and the appellants denied, that the appellants had
commenced to form and lay out a street for carriage or foot traffic within the ..."
3. Railroad Structures and Estimates by John Wilson Orrock (1909)
"When team, street car, and foot traffic is very heavy and dense this may be
necessary; when car and team traffic, however, is light, and foot traffic ..."
4. Civil Engineer and Architect's Journal (1866)
"The foot traffic is therefore more vast numerically than the carriage traffic,
and its activity and circulation in all parts is more surprising : and ..."
5. The Metropolis Local Management Acts: To which is Added an Appendix by Great Britain (1880)
"Streets, roads, &c., formed for foot traffic not to be used without ... Streets,
roads, Л г., formed for foot traffic before passing of Act not to be used ..."
6. A General Freight and Passenger Post: A Practical Solution of the Railroad by James Lewis Cowles (1905)
"The lowering of the car-tolls, however, made it possible for the weary earners
of low wages to ride, and the foot-traffic declined to ..."