Tramway in a sentence as a noun

And where, if it's a segregated tramway and the bus can't use the stop?

I can't see an outcome where pretty soon it's not just a fancy tramway.

A tramway can be 50 meters long. A bus is usually 12-18 meters.

I got my math education in a tramway since it was the only distraction free place and I had to be there anyway.

That was on a tramway of a different type, in another city. The type in Chiatura does have automatic brakes.

Compared to a neighbouring city: Prague: 1,2 million passengers using 60 km of subway, 550 km of tramway and 1815 km of 150 lines buses. Too many buses, obviously.

I spent some time downtown, which was a bit better - they had a nice museum, some trees, and even a tramway to get around. Sadly, the downtown area was minuscule, and had no personality.

Wouldn't it have been better to make a deal with the cab drivers so they would get some alternative jobs and Vegas would get it's monorail or some sort of tramway?

This happened to a tramway in Georgia's capital Tbilisi in 1990, killing twenty people. All in all, a good article that shows a really neat place. A city of tons of tramways, built for an incredible worker efficiency.

That looks like an incredibly expensive above ground subway/metro compared to something like a tramway network which seems like it would fit this style of development far more. I would expect you could finance a tramway network for the entire property for far less than $250 million.

For example the tramway picture: it's in basically every single movie show from foreign "journalist" who got to get there. I say "journalist" because they're not allowed to do anything on their own: they're constantly accompanied by members from the party.

What do you do, cycle on a road where cars drive insanely fast and pay absolutely no attention to you, cycle on the busy sidewalk where you slalom between elders and kids that have absolutely no idea you're coming behind them, or cycle on the tramway tracks? The safest option for you and others is the most illegal one, and the most dangerous option is the one you're enforced to use.

Tramway definitions

noun

a conveyance that transports passengers or freight in carriers suspended from cables and supported by a series of towers

See also: tram ropeway

noun

the track on which trams or streetcars run

See also: tramline