0 a lift or machine for raising persons, goods etc to a higher floor -- elevator
1 a tall storehouse for grain. -- kornsilo
Railroads could purchase up to 1/3 of the stock of grain elevators that the railroad serviced.
Examples of this would include vacation, executive, relocate, concertise, elevator and medication.
The optical change is equivalent to that produced by an imaginary elevator that rises at a constant rate along the tilted line.
A neurologist discussed motion sickness in elevators, emphasizing the need for height limitations.
The 1888, 1889, and 1897 investigations covered a variety of industries, including sugar, oil, rubber, grain elevators, and transportation of dairy products.
The installation of elevators in the early 1900s no doubt helped with handling the blood.
But one always knows when an old, poorly maintained elevator is on the move - not because it's accelerating, but because the acceleration is changing rapidly.
The elevators were frequently not working, increasing the sense of isolation, especially for the elderly.