Underpass in a sentence as a noun

They replaced it, at great expense, with an underpass.

I went to Bali to see the 2 underpasses there and rode a taxi through them.

And it exists in the CS:GO version of de_dust as well, though it's on the 'off' side of underpass.

I was pretty sure for 99% of its track it never goes deeper into the ground than an underpass.

I'll trust him that it didn't play as well, but it just seemed like there should have been another way out of the underpass.

For example, a new underpass was built here in Adelaide on a road leading into the city.

It has a relatively steep incline and the road curves as you enter and exit the underpass.

> "Rejected: a staircase joining the underpass to the central hallway.

I believe it's just pointing out that, unlike other parts of the map, the underpass is a linear corridor where noobs don't have to worry about being flanked.

So hopefully there is no incentive for "revenue raising" cameras - wouldn't the potential and actual crashes in the underpass have caused the camera to be installed?

>The underpass being isolated from the rest of the map was a feature in my opinion because it gave noobs a space where they only had to worry about what was directly in front of them.

>it just seemed like there should have been another way out of the underpassIn the CS:GO version of Dust there is actually a staircase leading out of underpass, though not directly into the central hallway.

Underpass definitions

noun

an underground tunnel or passage enabling pedestrians to cross a road or railway

See also: subway