Word Challenge!
funicular (fyoo-NIK-yuh-luhr) adjective
Of, relating to, or operated by a rope or cord.
noun
A cable railway on a hill, especially one where simultaneously
ascending and descending cars counterbalance each other.
[From Latin funiculus (thin rope), diminutive of funis (rope). The
word funambulist (tight-rope walker) derives from the same root.]
"Was it -- oh! finally, was it Tyrolean,
Standing on top of a view like Napoleon,
Mostly funicular, quite perpendicular,
Lots of new friends, if you aren't so particular?"
Philip Guedalla (1889-1944); Vacational.
"Those wanting to return to Dufferin Terrace without climbing the steps
can take a funicular ride up from Petit Champlain."
Joscelyn Proby; Quirky Side of Quebec City Beckons; The Toronto Star
(Canada); Jul 8, 2000.
Of, relating to, or operated by a rope or cord.
noun
A cable railway on a hill, especially one where simultaneously
ascending and descending cars counterbalance each other.
[From Latin funiculus (thin rope), diminutive of funis (rope). The
word funambulist (tight-rope walker) derives from the same root.]
"Was it -- oh! finally, was it Tyrolean,
Standing on top of a view like Napoleon,
Mostly funicular, quite perpendicular,
Lots of new friends, if you aren't so particular?"
Philip Guedalla (1889-1944); Vacational.
"Those wanting to return to Dufferin Terrace without climbing the steps
can take a funicular ride up from Petit Champlain."
Joscelyn Proby; Quirky Side of Quebec City Beckons; The Toronto Star
(Canada); Jul 8, 2000.
no subject