The way they lift the load.
It has exactly the came meaning but lift it's used in UK and elevator in USA.
Elisha Otis
Up to one ton, apparently..
An elevator can be compared to voltage in that both involve the concept of potential energy and movement. Just as an elevator uses electrical energy to lift a car and its passengers to a higher floor, voltage serves as the electrical potential difference that drives current through a circuit. Higher voltage can be thought of as a greater "push" that enables more energy to be transferred, similar to how an elevator can lift heavier loads with more power. Thus, both systems rely on the principle of converting stored energy into usable work.
The British term for elevator is "lift." In the UK, the word "lift" is commonly used in both everyday conversation and in building signage. The term is widely recognized and understood throughout British English-speaking regions.
It has exactly the came meaning but lift it's used in UK and elevator in USA.
Both lifts and cranes are used for same purpose, which is load lifting. The difference between lift and crane is the way they lift load. Lifts carry weights from the bottom and move upwards while cranes pull weights from bottom to top.
A crane, elevator, rope, hauling man, or a really big ramp.
In British English, "lift" refers to an elevator, used to move people or goods between floors in a building.
This is one of the mysteries of the universe. The answer was revealed to me once in Shanghai. A crane "grows" or gets taller as needed as the building under construction is built. the top section of the crane as a lift built in. The crane hauls a new section, like a section of scaffolding, up to the top and sets in place. I'm told that a crane is often anchored in place in the base of the elevator shaft, so when the building is complete, they lift the crane out section by section, leaving the very base in the elevator shaft permanently. Or at least that's the way I understand it to happen.
In British English, a lift refers to an elevator, which is a device used to move people or goods vertically between floors in a building. It is commonly used to avoid taking the stairs.
The elevator ('lift' in the UK). He did not invent the elevator(lift). He invented the elevator brake system.
Yes, "lift" and "elevator" are terms used interchangeably to refer to a device that moves people or goods vertically between floors in a building. In British English, "lift" is more commonly used, while in American English, "elevator" is the preferred term.
Yes. Americans call Englands' lift an elevator.
levantar = to lift ascensor = lift/elevator
Tagalog translation of elevator: elebetor
wha t is advantages of elevator?