WordNet
n. a ticket good for a ride on a railroad train [syn: railroad ticket]
Wikipedia
A train ticket is a ticket issued by a railway operator that enables the bearer to travel on the operator's network or a partner's network. Tickets can authorize the bearer to travel a set itinerary at a specific time (common for long-distance railroads), a set itinerary at any time (common for commuter railroads), a set itinerary at multiple times, or an arbitrary itinerary at specific times. (The last two categories are often called passes: the former is often sold as a discounted block of trips for commuters; the latter is often sold to vacationers—for instance, European Eurail passes.)
In the US a conductor may also provide the passenger with a seat check — another voucher indicating how far the passenger may travel on the system — or attach it over the seat also punched by the conductor showing the passenger's destination. Some systems ( Amtrak, for instance) have two-part tickets that permit the passenger to retain a cancelled ticket stub; others (the New Jersey Transit and MBTA commuter rail systems, for instance) do not. Seat checks are changed frequently to ensure that passengers cannot retain and reuse them from journey to journey. (Conductors typically collect checks before stops to prevent this.)
In some countries, like Italy, and some local railways in Germany, conductors are not used. Instead passengers are expected to validate tickets in a special stamping machine before entering the train. A system of coupons that are validated with a special machine exists on the Mumbai Suburban Railway where combinations of coupons of different denominations are used to get the corresponding ticket value. There may or may not be a conductor later on double-checking that correct tickets are actually held. Yet further systems are possible, for example in Japan, the London Underground and in local traffic in Stockholm, the platforms are physically blocked, forcing the acquisition of a ticket before entering the platform.
Some train tickets are available with an option to add bus travel at either end of the train ticketed journey, as part of a wider transport network. For instance, the PLUSBUS scheme in the United Kingdom offers additional bus travel on an integrated ticket for a fee of between £2 and £4. In Germany most long distance train tickets include a "city ticket" valid on the public transit system of origin and destination. This is automatically included at no extra charge in all tickets purchased by Bahn Card holders and is indicated on the ticket.
Usage examples of "train ticket".
It contained a train ticket to Budapest in the name of Commander Robert Bellamy.
Austin had paid for his train ticket with ordinary currency, and ditto for the cans of beer, packages of Cellophaned sandwiches, and copy of a racing newspaper.
After I catch up with Ned, I'll intercept the railroad and trade in my horse for a train ticket to Donner Pass.
She went to the ticket counter to purchase her train ticket to New York.
And I didn't like the ticket being half yellow but I had to keep it because it was my train ticket.
You told me that you personally arranged for my train ticket, so you were the only one who knew the number of my compartment.
I bet he's got a pocketful of train ticket punchout confetti and Scott Joplin's peeled-off head, too.
They walked around the corner, just out of his range of vision, and began to strategize on how to get the train ticket.
Preston received the news about the train ticket to Sheffield at just after one o'clock.
It wasnt that she minded being Summoned, it was what Keepers did, after all, but since her wallet had been distinctly short of lineage money, and shed had to spend her Christmas money to buy the train ticket, it didnt seem exactly fair.
She didn't know who they were, so they traced a zigzag relationship, and sure enough, she had to admit, maybe they were related: Before I left, I counted my money and saw I had enough for the train ticket to Peking at the lowest, lowest price.
Well, man dear, I was after thinkin' yonder that I'd be makin' ye a small loan for your train ticket, but d'ye know, I'd he party to an awful sin if I did that, so I would.
His dinner cost him less than a dollar, a bargain as compared to the price of the train ticket.