no it's an underground train system
kind of- it has the "T" which is like an aboveground subway.
The Stockholm subway system in Sweden is called Tunnelbana or T-bana, which means underground train or Tunnel train. I suppose that is what the "T" stands for.
the synonym for subway is train station
Train station. Subway is under ground and train station is overground.
The London underground system is usually referred to as 'the tube'.
The LIRR is a railroad system that has trains that go on train tracks above ground and sometimes underground as it hits Manhatten and brooklyn. The NYC subway is totally different. The NYC subway has buses that run on streets underground and sometimes elevated. The NYC is essentially an urban bus system that has buses that go more underground.
You can get from any train to any other train on the New York City subway system. You may have to make 2, 3 or possibly even 4 transfers, but you can get from any train to any other train without exiting the subway system. Point being, this question does not have enough information to be answered. The answer depends upon what train you are starting out from. So, please ask your question again, this time specifying a starting point: either an address or cross street, or a subway line, for example: "How do you get from Delancey Street and Ludlow Street to the E train?" or "How do you get from the D train to the E train?"
Train A
yes
Uj7ji
Underground
The agriculture in Japan takes the train, not the subway.