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Definition of Gas line
1. Noun. A queue of vehicles waiting to purchase gasoline.
2. Noun. A pipeline used to transport natural gas. "The workmen broke through the gas line"
3. Noun. A pipe that carries gasoline from a tank to a gasoline engine. "The car wouldn't start because dirt clogged the gas line"
Group relationships: Fuel System
Generic synonyms: Pipage, Pipe, Piping
Lexicographical Neighbors of Gas Line
Literary usage of Gas line
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings by Natural Gas Association of America, Modern Language Association of America (1917)
"LEAK DETECTOR FOR gas line IN CASING. HH HARRINGTON, CITIZENS' GAS & ELECTRIC
CO., ELYRIA, OHIO. Tap casing at highest point, saddle and run \l/\" line to ..."
2. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1896)
"While the gas line was brilliant, it was found to be " the least trace more ...
Giving the observations equal weight, the gas line would thus appear to be ..."
3. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1895)
"It was at once apparent, therefore, that the gas line was not far removed ...
While the gas line was brilliant, it was found to be " the least trace more ..."
4. Hand Book of Natural Gas by Henry Palmer Westcott (1920)
"It should be taken into consideration that a small leak on a gas line, even though
it may be blown out by the use of a hat, means a continual loss of gas ..."
5. The American State Reports: Containing the Cases of General Value and by Abraham Clark Freeman (1902)
"... that the said Mary A. Edgell, her heirs or assigns, shall have the right to
connect a service line with the gas line of the first parties, near said gas ..."
6. Handbook of Casinghead Gas by Henry Palmer Westcott (1922)
"D—Three-eighth inch tap in gas line. DE, F, G, H, J—Three-eighth inch wheel valves.
L—Three-eighth inch pipe. M—Brace to hold L and A in relative position. ..."
7. Proceedings by Natural Gas Association of America, Modern Language Association of America (1917)
"LEAK DETECTOR FOR gas line IN CASING. HH HARRINGTON, CITIZENS' GAS & ELECTRIC
CO., ELYRIA, OHIO. Tap casing at highest point, saddle and run \l/\" line to ..."
8. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1896)
"While the gas line was brilliant, it was found to be " the least trace more ...
Giving the observations equal weight, the gas line would thus appear to be ..."
9. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1895)
"It was at once apparent, therefore, that the gas line was not far removed ...
While the gas line was brilliant, it was found to be " the least trace more ..."
10. Hand Book of Natural Gas by Henry Palmer Westcott (1920)
"It should be taken into consideration that a small leak on a gas line, even though
it may be blown out by the use of a hat, means a continual loss of gas ..."
11. The American State Reports: Containing the Cases of General Value and by Abraham Clark Freeman (1902)
"... that the said Mary A. Edgell, her heirs or assigns, shall have the right to
connect a service line with the gas line of the first parties, near said gas ..."
12. Handbook of Casinghead Gas by Henry Palmer Westcott (1922)
"D—Three-eighth inch tap in gas line. DE, F, G, H, J—Three-eighth inch wheel valves.
L—Three-eighth inch pipe. M—Brace to hold L and A in relative position. ..."