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The preposition is through.The noun 'tunnel' is the object of the preposition.Through
120 km/h = 120,000m/hr = 33.333 m/s Distance travelled in 50 seconds = 33.333 * 50 = 1666.666 metres Tunnel length = distance travelled - train length - 1666.666 - 135 = 1531.666metres
I am not sure if this question is correct, but my interpretation of the situation would be as follows. We consider the time it takes to pass through a tunnel to be the time that it takes from when the very front of the vehicle enters the tunnel to when the very end of the vehicle leaves the tunnel. Imagine a driver at the very front of the train and a conductor at the very back of the train. The distance between them would give the length of the train. At the beginning of the 2 minutes that it takes to pass through the tunnel the driver is at the opening of the tunnel. At the very end of the 2 minutes the conductor is at the exit of the tunnel. At that time the driver is still a trains length in front of the conductor. Therefore, in the 2 minutes the driver has travelled the length of the tunnel (1.5km) plus the length of the train (we will call this x). We are going to use the formula speed = distance travelled/time which rearranges to distance travelled = speed * time speed(km/h) = 60 distance travelled (km)= 1.5 + x time(minutes) = 2 time is in minutes so we must convert speed to minutes: 60km/h = 1km/min substituting these into distance travelled = speed * time gives: 1.5 + x = 1 * 2 1.5 + x = 2 x = 0.5 So, the length of the train must be 0.5 kilometres, which seems very high.
The eurostar.
2 hours. If the train is one mile long and going 1 mile per hour through a mile long tunnel, in one hour the train would be completely inside the tunnel, since they are the same length and the train is only going one full tunnel length(mile) per hour. It would then take another whole hour for the end of the train to leave the tunnel, bringing the train completely out of the tunnel.
By plane, by boat (ferry) of by train (via the tunnel). I would add to that that the train through the Channel Tunnel goes from Calais, France; not direct from the Netherlands.
No, the train goes underneath the channel through a long underwater tunnel.
No, the word 'through' is not a verb.The word 'through' is a preposition, adverb, or an adjective.Examples:The ball went through a window. (preposition, 'a window' is the object of the preposition)We came through without a scratch. (adverb, modifies the verb 'came')The through traffic must take the left lane. (adjective, describes the noun 'traffic')When I finish this answer, I'm through. (predicate adjective, restates the subject 'I')To test if a word is a verb, can we say the verb is 'to through'? We can say 'to throw', and say "I throw, You throw, He throws .." etc, but 'I through, You through, He throughs ..." just doesn't make sense! So through is not a verb.Analysis of sentence containing the word through:"The train (noun) went (verb) through (preposition) the tunnel (noun, object of the preposition)."
Yes. Any train can travel through the Channel Tunnel which passes the required safety checks, and pays the toll to the owners of the tunnel (Eurotunnel).
Counting from the moment when the front end of the train enters the tunnel until themoment when the rear end of the train leaves the tunnel, 9 minutes will elapse.
They went through the tunnel on the train. They were through with the project and went home happy.
There is no way to answer correctly without knowing where the train is relative to the tunnel and the speed that the train is traveling.