Eastbound in a sentence as an adjective

Everyone is on the new clock in 1-2 days eastbound and 2-3 days westbound.

The diagram shows a required right turn for eastbound Market St. traffic at 6th.

My friend and I would turn onto O'Farrell heading eastbound then take a left onto Larkin where we witnessed some of the worst things.

It would be trivial to establish a toll on the eastbound Bay Bridge, for example, or to raise the westbound toll, but we haven't done it.

I was waiting for a train that only has one platform - the train goes east/west, and eastbound stops on the opposite side of the same platform as the westbound.

A few months ago I was heading to Brooklyn, and I had to catch it from Union Square to the 8th avenue terminal - otherwise, there was no chance of getting on an eastbound train.

It cannot handle the I90 express lanes in either direction; getting directions to somewhere on Mercer Island from Seattle when you're on the express lanes eastbound gets a route to Bellevue, turn around, and come back.

The L trip profile is lopsided, westbound in the morning and eastbound in the evening, so the marginal gain in capacity of adding another train to it is less than to another line and the MTA is broke enough they have to make those kinds of choices.

That helps with rush hour commuter traffic, except that a lot of cars are eastbound for evening appointments even as commuters are leaving the city, so the reversal of lanes still leaves the regular, nonreversible lanes badly congested each evening.

Eastbound definitions

adjective

moving toward the east; "eastbound trains"

See also: eastward