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The most common form of mass transit in the late 1800s was the train. Although there were some horse-drawn vehicles that carried multiple people, trains had by far the bulk of the mass transit population.
The noun cities is the plural form of the noun city.The plural possessive form is cities'(apostrophe after the S).Example: The western cities' access to water was limited.
Which of these was not a form of national currency in the 1800s? A+
Transit (v)- to pass over, across, or through
Its a form of rapid transit.
In the late 1800's meaning 1870 and after most cities in EUROPE had Horse-drawn streetcars. Around 1890 electric streetcars began replacing the horse powered ones. It's similar in the US, but there things developed a little earlyer
The noun 'cities' is a plural, common, concrete noun; a word for a place; a word for a thing.The singular form of the noun is 'city'.
The largest mass transit on land is a train and on sea it is the sea liner.
An underground series of tunnels with trains running through them. They are used as a form of mass transit allowing pedestrians to get across big cities generally quicker than by car.
Yes, the noun 'cities' is a common noun (the plural form of the noun city), a general word for any cities anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing (a city is a place). A proper noun for cities is the names of the cities, for example: Pittsburgh, Paris, and Port-au-Prince.
Mass Transit Railway
the late 1800s