tank town การใช้
- Well, it's the kind of embarrassing, tank town, Double-A stuff you'd expect from rubes.
- Normally they roam Western tank towns taking money from the locals at clandestine drag races.
- There were no tank towns on that itinerary.
- He began selling rainwater systems at his site he calls Tank Town, for all the water-collection tanks.
- For a brief moment, a whistle stop, a tank town, a wide place in the road was transformed.
- Since we cannot pay our bills, many services that citizens of other major capitals, to say nothing of tank towns, take for granted never get done.
- In any case, the tank towns'primary purpose was to resupply the locomotives with water . ?! carrots?! 02 : 38, 6 June 2012 ( UTC)
- And as to the former, you have to figure the Broadway Principle applies _ namely it is advisable to open a show in tank towns before bringing it to the Big Town.
- They played their big home games at the Pittsburgh Pirates'Forbes Field and the Senators'Griffith Stadium when they were not traveling from tank towns to big cities in their bus, sometimes playing three games in one day.
- Where there was a gap, towns were constructed specifically to provide water for the locomotives, hence the term " tank town " for any small town . ?! carrots?! 23 : 53, 5 June 2012 ( UTC)
- In " Buffalo, " which opens next Sunday at the Martin Beck Theater after several weeks of previews, Ms . Burnett and her co-star, Philip Bosco, play George and Charlotte Hay, an oversize pair of second-rate Lunts touring the tank towns in repertory productions of " Cyrano de Bergerac " and " Private Lives ."
- The court ruled five years ago that officers can use any traffic violation as an excuse for stopping motorists even when they have ulterior motives . ( See " profiling, racial . " ) Combine that ruling with this one and you have legal license for every tank town petty-power freak with a badge to act out.
- To avoid stopping at the water tower in a " tank town, " railroads in the 1870's introduced the use of a track pan between the tracks and a scoop which could be lowered to force water up into the tender, giving rise to the term " jerkwater town . " It's a place where the train doesn't even stop for water.