telpher
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek [Term?] "far" + "to carry".
Noun
telpher (plural telphers)
- An electric-run cable car used for transportation, along overhead wires.
- A system of transportation using telphers.
- 2020 December 30, Tim Dunn, “The railway's mechanical marvels”, in Rail, page 55:
- In 1898, the ever-innovative Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway installed an overhead delivery system known as a 'telpher'. […] But the telpher at Manchester Victoria wasn't part of a crane. It was part of an extraordinary dual-railed overhead line, a little like a suspended monorail, with individually manned units that trundled high above the heads of passengers and staff, carrying goods from the Parcels Office to each platform.
Derived terms
- telpherage
- telpheric
- telpher line
- telpher road
Verb
telpher (third-person singular simple present telphers, present participle telphering, simple past and past participle telphered)
- To transport with a telpher.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.