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trams

n. (plural of tram English)

Usage examples of "trams".

Beneath Margarita floated the roofs of buses, trams and cars, and along the sidewalks, as it seemed to Margarita from above, floated rivers of caps.

Beyond the new iron bridges which bear the trams above the ferries, where the Thames spreads her fingers through tidal mud.

Along there the trams andcarriages, and the cars and the carts and the drays, bore guildsmen of every kind to their daily labours in Tidesmeet Docks.

Look at me, and look at Saul, and look at Maud, too, hopping from toe to toe in a pink skirt of surprising finery as bracelets tinkle at her wrists on this Midsummer day as we cluster around a shared cigarette by the dustbins between two Doxy Street boarding houses, watching the trams go by as we debate the wild moment for the leap which will take us to the fair in Westminster Great Park.

The trams here were odd devices, open-sided and with striped blue and red awnings.

Once again, the trams were running back in London, but those three days had been a glimpse of something better and I almost regretted leaving London, if only for a couple of days.

Wilenska Station, having to use more of the camber because the first trams had started running.

On rainy days she would take the trams that ran through the major boulevards, but today the afternoon sun continued to shine through a clear sky.

She switched trams twice before she finally arrived at the workshop, confident no one was following her.

So much time had been wasted just sitting in trams expecting them to move any minute.

Denise could hardly believe it, but the trams on the high-speed link between the roadways were also stationary.

Whatever the reason, the trams were running normally, and most of the shops seemed to be open.

Office and factory girls were hurrying to their work, some boarding trams and some walking.

Horse-drawn buses and electric trams were only partly full, most people being at their places of work by now.

Along there the trams and carriages, and the cars and the carts and the drays, bore guildsmen of every kind to their daily labours in Tidesmeet Docks.