With ever-increasing travel between the U.K. and France, there simply was no way for all those cars and people to be carried on slow ferries. Even the faster hovercraft couldn't handle the number of travellers, and in any case hovercraft are rather energy-inefficient.
Rail transport is hands down the most efficient way to move goods and people, and with recent upgrades to rails on the British side the trip from one capital to the other can be made at speeds of up to 300 km/hr.
It takes 2 hours 15 minutes from London to Paris by train via the Channel Tunnel. More passengers travel from London to Paris by train than by air.
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 Channel Tunnel is normally just called the Channel Tunnel. Road signs say "Channel Tunnel" on the English side, and "Tunnel sous la Manche" on the French side.
The Channel Tunnel is faster.
Yes. It is an amazing feat of engineering.
This is known as the Channel Tunnel (or Chunnel), named for the English Channel. The Channel Tunnel is no longer referred to as the Chunnel, which was a media generated word when the tunnel first opened but not now.
The Channel Tunnel is 50.45 km or 31.35 miles.
The channel tunnel is also known as the chunnel.
The compound noun 'channel tunnel' is a common noun as a word for any tunnel under a channel. However, there is only one that is specifically called the Channel Tunnel or the Eurotunnel, both are proper nouns. common noun: There is a plan underway to build a channel tunnel between Malta and Italy. proper noun: We took the Channel Tunnel to France.
The Channel Tunnel is called the Channel Tunnel. It doesn't have any other name. It is owned and operated by a company called 'Eurotunnel'. Some people confuse the company name with the Channel Tunnel itself, but that is incorrect.
in side the channnel tunnel is lights and a train goes throe it to transport you over to a diff-rent country
an English term for the tunnel is 'the chunnel' (a new word coined from 'channel' and 'tunnel')
The only 'structure' is the Channel Tunnel.