You say that you can go there direct.You can't go to Manchester direct. You have to change trains at Birmingham. direct [sth] at [sb] vtr (aim, target)将某物瞄准某人;将某物对准某人The marketing campaign was directed at young women.营销活动瞄准的是年轻女性。 direct [sb] vtr (guide,...
[59] note that the majority of passengers commuting through self-driving trains were not worried about using those trains. However, the aforementioned trains and autonomous pods operate on enclosed tracks, isolated from the public roads, and bypass the need to interact with other vehicles or ...
Maimonides, a 705-bed tertiary medical center seeing 80,000 ED visits annually, trains residents in nearly every specialty, including emergency medicine. Contact Steven Davidson, MD, MBA, FACEP, Chairman, Department of Emergency Medicine, Maimonides Medical Center, 4802 Tenth Ave, Brooklyn, NY ...
You can't go to Manchester direct. You have to change trains at Birmingham. 3. 'directly': looking at something If you look straight at a person or thing, you can say that you are looking directly at them. She turned her head and looked directly at them. Be Careful!Don't use 'dire...
For mainly historical and political reasons, transportation within Britain is not integrated and cars, taxis, buses, trains, and to a lesser extent aeroplanes and ships, compete with each other for the same travelling public. Rather than change from train to bus or plane within one building, ...
Whilst even the first phase of the line from London to Birmingham would benefit a large network of origins and destinations, since it would carry trains to major centres of population such as Manchester and Glasgow which would complete their journeys on the conventional network, the full Y ...
locations along that network. If a citizen lives in a TOD and works in the same TOD or in another connected by the transit line, commuting to work can be both efficient and convenient assuming transit trains or coaches run frequently and have space to ride comfortably (Nelson and Niles, ...
Obviously, cities are able to grow larger when people could use horse carriages. This all changed with the transportation (and architectural) revolutions of the 19th and 20th centuries. First, railways (trains, tramways and metro lines) and roads (cars, buses, motorbikes and bicycles) have ...