¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Tramlines
1. tramline [n] - See also: tramline
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tramlines
Literary usage of Tramlines
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sessional Papers (1901)
"This right is inclusive of the right to construct and work tramlines, and for
that purpose to liave and to lay rails in the public streets and roads through ..."
2. The Electrical Engineer (1898)
"... (3) that what is known as the feeder system of supply should DO adopted in
connection with the proposed tramlines, so as to separate the same in small ..."
3. The Story of New Zealand: A History of New Zealand from the Earliest Times by Frank Parsons (1904)
"In 1872 the Tramways Act provided that tramlines may be built by a local authority
or by a private party or corporation with consent of the local authority ..."
4. Transactions of the International Engineering Congress, 1915 (1916)
"At the end of 1913, 206 kilometers of railroads in Java and Madura had a gauge
of 1.435 meters; 32 kilometers of tramlines (in the adjoining towns of ..."
5. Return to Resistance: Breeding Crops to Reduce Pesticide Dependence by Raoul A. Robinson (1996)
"The spraying process requires a tractor to be sent through the wheat, and the
tractor wheels flatten some of the wheat, producing characteristic "tramlines" ..."
6. Sheffield in the Eighteenth Century by Robert Eadon Leader (1901)
"Credit for making the wooden tramlines, destroyed by rioters in 1774, has been
given (" Local Notes and Queries," April 6, 1876) to one Furniss, or Furness, ..."
7. Hungary: A Sketch of the Country, Its People and Its Conditions by Gyula Vargha (1908)
"The number of town tramlines engaged In the service of public traffic (mainly
... The invested capital of these tramlines, at the close of the said year, ..."