The "elevator property" is thepsychological urge to help others that you are forced into close contact to. In other words, when you walk into an elevator full of people, you feel connected to them. If that elevator crashed, you would feel inclined to help the others out before yourself.
This principle works everywhere, not just in elevators.
That would be entirely up to the property owner to decide.
Yes. Ride an elevator and your weight changes, but your mass remains constant.
get in an elevator
The Tagalog term for elevator is "elevator" or "lift."
It has no steps!
Not necessarily. An hydraulic elevator (as in mining), or a grain elevator would not be pulleys. Nor elevator shoes.
No. The word "elevator" can be a noun ("Get on the elevator!") or more rarely an adjective ("Check out my new elevator shoes.") *uses such as elevator shoes or elevator shaft may be considered a noun adjunct rather than an adjective
The elevator ('lift' in the UK). He did not invent the elevator(lift). He invented the elevator brake system.
Elevator shaft.
Elevators is the plural of elevator
Elevator with an Australian accent.
the Otis-dominated elevator industry kept pace with developments of its own, introducing the hydraulic elevator in 1878, the electric elevator in 1889, and the gearless traction electric elevator in 1903.