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Answer for the clue "Stop on a train route ", 5 letters:
depot

Alternative clues for the word depot

Word definitions for depot in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. station where transport vehicles load or unload passengers or goods [syn: terminal , terminus ] a depository for goods; "storehouses were built close to the docks" [syn: storehouse , entrepot , storage , store ]

Usage examples of depot.

They were standing a couple of hundred feet above the level of the Tiefer depot.

Both the men were working her husband, Hub, down at the airfreight depot in Waycross, and son Dave hauling sand and gravel over near Bickley.

McGuire found himself as he tumbled from his car and sat upon the depot platform, torn by a spasm of that hollow, racking cough so familiar to San Antonian ears.

This supply depot was attacked by the Earl of Atholl and Sir William and many of the guards were killed.

Coolin to Henry Withers, of the Sick Horse Depot, two hours afterwards, when the Berkshires and the Sikhs and the Bengalese were on the march towards Tamai.

He stopped in front of the depot and looked at Calao, trying hard not to show any fear in his eyes.

The cartman who had taken the trunk to the depot came forward, after reading the account of the affair in the newspapers, and conducted the police to the house where he had received it.

The family remained at Bunda-Bunda, a claypan south of Jigalong, except for the occasional trips to the depot to pick up food rations and to gather the latest news and gossip.

Therefore I say, after due thought and consideration, that this William Dykar, chief surgeon of the depot at Dartmoor from 1809 to 1814, was a deliberate and coldblooded murderer.

Frank Jackson gave her a compassionate discharge when she married Sterling Pridmore and the blessed event turned out to be twins, rather than accommodate the babies in the Erfurt Supply Depot, although Amber Lee was quite willing to soldier on.

Dennis promptly hired her as his executive assistant, to continue as a civilian doing the job she had done in the military, so the twins were spending their days in the Erfurt Supply Depot anyway.

There were several people waiting for the train, and as it chugged toward the depot, the white flagman waved it down.

As there were no landmarks, we had to indicate the position of our depots by flags, which were posted at a distance of about four miles to the east and west.

The old tracks were soon lost sight of, but we immediately picked up the line of flags that had been set up at every second kilometre on the last depot journey.

Most were left in depots about 100 kilometers back, however, where they could be moved quickly to the frontline troops if Saddam ordered it but where they were unlikely to be fired accidentally.