no it is not. a locomotive is a type of train locomotion is a type of movement
locomotive, locomotion, locomotory
The locomotive steam train pulled into the station.Example sentence - The locomotive was traveling west.The locomotive was travelling at one hundred miles per hour.
the Stockton & Darlington Railway, using the locomotive "Locomotion", about 1825.
Locomotion is the term for the ability to independently move about from place to place.
The purpose of a train's locomotive is to provide sufficient power to move the train and it's passengers or cargo to it's required destination.
same way as diesel locomotive, sort of
Because of their locomotive method.They use pseudofeet for locomotion.
The root "loco" comes from the Latin, locus, meaning "place". The words "locomotive" and "locomotion" contain this root.
No. Locomotion is simply the ability to move place to place. It does not matter how many legs--or no legs; or whether person, animal, reptile, spider, etc. In fact, a locomotive on the railroad, a train, can move place to place.
it means the same as locomotion :)
Graduating from horse driven carts along railways to steam locomotion took almost 30 years, but the increase in productivity was well worth it. The initial leaders in development were the British and had developed a fully operation locomotive prior to the entry in 1830 by the US. The boiler was the key to developing the steam power.
about locomotive crane