The nickname 'chunnel' isn't used any more. It was manufactured by the media around 20 years ago to describe the Channel Tunnel and is a mixture of those two words.
It's a combination word made up from Channel and Tunnel. The word "chunnel" is no longer used. It is called the Channel Tunnel.
The word 'chunnel' isn't used anymore. It was a media manufactured word to describe the Channel Tunnel which is a rail tunnel connecting southeast England with northern France
The word 'chunnel' isn't used anymore. It was a media manufactured word from Channel Tunnel. Tunnelling commenced in 1988 and the first passengers were able to use the tunnel in 1994
The Chunnel is an out-of-date name for the Channel Tunnel.
The chunnel comes out in Coquelles, a village near Calais.
The chunnel (actually the Channel Tunnel) connects England to France.
The Chunnel is a name that was sometimes used for the Channel Tunnel before it was built.
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The Chunnel was excavated into chalk by the tunnel boring machines then was reinforced with concrete.
The Chunnel runs underneath the English Channel, connecting England and France.
an English term for the tunnel is 'the chunnel' (a new word coined from 'channel' and 'tunnel')
Europe