viaducts in English

noun
1
a long bridgelike structure, typically a series of arches, carrying a road or railroad across a valley or other low ground.
From the stone walls and landscaped embankments to the sweep of the footbridges and the modern viaduct that carries the road over the river, this scheme was designed not just not to offend the eye but to please it.

Use "viaducts" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "viaducts" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "viaducts", or refer to the context using the word "viaducts" in the English Dictionary.

1. The station at La Poterie and viaducts on the line were designed by Norman Foster.

2. Traditionally, Airspace was that area under bridge structures and viaducts that could be used for other purposes

3. From here H-1 runs through the city of Honolulu along a series of underpasses and viaducts.

4. 13 The great and impregnable fortress is accessible by means of four highways built on lofty viaducts.

5. Concrete pile (1) for supporting structures a certain distance above ground level (M), such as viaducts and the like.

6. It is made up of three suspension bridges, two cable-stayed bridges, a truss bridge, and the viaducts linking them.

7. 47% of the railway will be in tunnels and 15% will pass over viaducts, spread over 75 tunnels and 167 bridges.

8. Architecture is designing the structures of buildings.It uses both art and engineering.Examples include houses, churches, hotels, office buildings, roads, viaducts, tunnels and bridges

9. Our company Barin, aerial platforms, machines for inspection and maintenance of road and railway bridges and viaducts The Largest Bridge Inspection Unit in the World Barin S.r.l

10. The city is known for its network of canals that divide Amsterdam into some 90 ‘islands’ that are connected by over 1,300 bridges and viaducts.

11. Blight is a state of mind, a level of consciousness and perception, and the Blighters—Ziggy, Pepper, Deejo, and Dave—have heard “the music of viaducts”; they have been to “churches where

12. And to do that meant creating the flattest gradients that had ever yet been made, which meant building long viaducts across river valleys -- this is actually the viaduct across the Thames at Maidenhead -- and long tunnels such as the one at Box, in Wiltshire.