Just think of all the disasters which could befall you in the channel tunnel. What if the tunnel falls apart? What if it explodes? Anything is possible.
the channel tunnel isexpenisveprobably coldboringpolluted
yes, assuming you use the channel tunnel or a ferry to cross the English channel
No, because it is a tunnel, and a tunnel cannot move!The Chunnel is a name that was sometimes used for the Channel Tunnel before it was built.The Channel Tunnel an underwater railway tunnel that links the United Kingdom with France, it runs underneath the Strait of Dover. It is 50.45 Km long.You can take a train which goes through the Channel Tunnel from London to Paris.
The Channel tunnel (actually twin tunnels) is a railroad tunnel, the second-longest the world . There is no road inside save for the third tunnel, which is a single carriageway escape tunnel (special emergency vehicles, able to drive in either direction, were designed for this safety tunnel)
Most people use their names.
you should have rock smash. so then use that in the tunnel by rustboro you should have rock smash. so then use that in the tunnel by rustboro you should have rock smash. so then use that in the tunnel by rustboro
a thought tunnel is something that people use in drama.
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 eurotunnel is another name for the chunnel Eurotunnel is the company which owns and operates the Channel Tunnel, as well as having other business interests. The term "chunnel" has fallen out of use on this side of the Atlantic.
A tunnel doesn't have times, it is an inert object! The Channel Tunnel is open 24 hours a day. Fewer trains use it at night than during the day. Eurostar does not have an overnight service, but Eurotunnel Shuttle car and Lorry transporting trains, as well as freight trains, run through the night.
Absolutely. You use the "chunnel"--the tunnel that runs from England to France under the English Channel.
The Channel Tunnel runs under the English Channel to connect (by rail) South East England with Northern France. The terminal is located off Junction 12 of the M20 and the French end of the tunnel emerges at Calais. See related links section for a local map.