英:['trækɪdʒ]
美:['trækɪdʒ]
英:['trækɪdʒ]
美:['trækɪdʒ]
n.
轨道
轨长
铁路轨道线路
线路使用权[使用费]
track·age
trae kihj
noun
the total amount of track owned by a railroad.
the right of one railway system to use the track owned by another.
the fee charged for this right.
The first known use of trackage was in 1880
1 At present, power electronics technology is quickly extending and applying to the implements for trackage traction and navigations.
当前,电力电子技术正在航行器具中迅速推广应用。
2 Between 1985 and 1996, for example, America's freight railways dramatically reduced their employment, trackage, and their fleets of locomotives - while increasing the amount of cargo they hauled.
在1985年到1996年之间,美国铁路货运大幅度裁员,缩短了路径,减少了货运车辆但同时却增加了货运的总量。
3 The Baltimore Transit Company (BTC) annual report of May 1960 tells a revelatory tale about how public transit in Baltimore was treated 60 years ago, when there were still 101 individual streetcars operating on 56 miles of trackage.
4 The rail lines have different owners but railroad companies frequently share trackage rights, said Tom Crosson, a spokesman for Norfolk Southern.
5 The trip covers most of the current operating trackage of the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad.
6 China’s government was using manual labor to maintain its railway system’s trackage.
7 Caltrain already has benefited from this approach to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars for electrification on the premise that, at some point in the future, high-speed trains would use the same trackage.
8 The commission said then there were signs that lack of competition in interconnection and trackage rights, which is allowing use of tracks by other operators, had restricted access to lines and pushed up freight costs.
2 铁路轨道