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1 Main-line program
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2 Gravity main
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3 air line main
காற்றுக் குழாய்
См. также в других словарях:
Main Line (NJ Transit) — Main Line … Wikipedia
Main Line of Public Works — Main Line of Public Works … Wikipedia
Main Line Broadcasting — is an American media company, based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Main Line Broadcasting owns 19 radio stations in four markets in the United States. The company is run by CEO Dan Savadove, a veteran Philadelphia broadcaster. Main Line is backed … Wikipedia
Main Line Through Upper Norrland — The railway line at Döda Fallet in northern Sweden Overview Type Railw … Wikipedia
main line — principal line of a railway, 1841; meaning affluent area of residence is by 1917, originally (with capitals) that of Philadelphia, from the main line of the Pennsylvania Railroad which added local stops to a string of backwater towns west of the… … Etymology dictionary
Main Line of Resistance — Main Line of Resistance, or MLR is a military term describing the most important defensive position of an army facing an opposing force over an extended front. It does not consist of one trench or line of pillboxes, but rather a system, of… … Wikipedia
main|line — «MAYN LYN», adjective, verb, lined, lin|ing. –adjective. 1. traveling on or situated along a main line: »mainline towns. 2. having a well established or prominent position; being part of the mainstream: »mainline Protestant churches.… … Useful english dictionary
main-line — ˌmain ˈline ; adjective • a main line station Main entry: ↑main linederived … Useful english dictionary
main line — n. Ahe principal route of a transportation system, such as a railroad or bus line. [WordNet 1.5] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
main line — n an important railway that connects two cities ▪ the main line to Moscow >mainline adj [only before noun] ▪ a mainline station … Dictionary of contemporary English
main line — main′ line′ n. 1) rai a principal highway or railway line 2) sts Slang. an accessible vein that can be used to inject a narcotic •• Etymology: 1835–45 … From formal English to slang