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trains

n. (plural of train English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: train)

Wikipedia
Trains (magazine)

Trains is a monthly US magazine dedicated to trains and railroads, and is one of the two flagship publications of Kalmbach Publishing. The magazine is read both by railroad enthusiasts, commonly referred to as railfans, and those within the railroad industry.

Trains (mural)

Trains is a mural in the Short North and Italian Village neighborhoods in Columbus, Ohio.

Created by Jeff and Gregory Ackers in 1989, it covers the south wall of Bernard's Tavern and depicts passengers (some who are British royalty) on a train arriving in Union Station.

It is across the parking lot of another well-known Ackers-created mural, Union Station

As of 2014, a building is being built on the space that served as a parking lot and the mural can no longer be seen.

Usage examples of "trains".

The Conductor of the Canadian said that he would radio ahead to Kamloops and both trains would stop there again, when there were multiple tracks, not just the one.

Kensington trains the business end of those three stars around on him.

The clientele were mostly travellers, coming or going on trains lacking buffet cars, starving or prudent, travellers checking their watches, gulping too-hot coffee, uninterested in others, leaving in a hurry.

Only in towns and at a few other places could trains going in opposite directions pass.

We needed always to stop where the trains were serviced for water, trash and fuel.

Johnson had meant the trains to crash with himself safely away to the rear.

The trains would fold into each other, would concertina, would heap into killing chaos.

But the pale little Sava and Velja Smodlaka coolly stayed at the edge of the platform, as did all the others to whom railway trains were no novelty.

The railroads in Russia are broad gauge, the rails set much wider apart, so the trains are built quite different.

I detest equally the countryside, the riding of railroad trains and the cold of wintertime.

No matter how tightly the trains were packed-and that this was carried to excess is common knowledge-the tying up of rolling stock remained a grave problem.

There never were surf icient trains and locomotives for the fighting fronts.

Henry, as I said, there are Gestapo agents on the trains and at the border.

For once, the everlasting Wannsee Protocol, the map of Poland with the three black circles, and the European trains carrying hundreds of thousands of Jews each month to their deaths faded from his mind.

The bullying Jewish kapos in Auschwitz, the Judenrat officials in Warsaw and the other cities who picked people to go on the trains, and protected their relatives and friends, are all a product of the German cruelty.