How to use "train" in a sentence
Sentences
Soon after that, I heard that I was leaving the army early, and they gave me some money for a train ticket to go home.
I tried to walk to the Hodaddy Club from the train station, but I lost my way, so I took a taxi
The train got into Mobile station about three o'clock in the morning, and Sue and I got off
"You work in Leeds, but you don't drive? I think your sports car can get you there a lot faster than the bus to Keighley and then the train to Leeds."
I see him at the train station sometimes; then he's there again when I get off the bus in the town centre here in Howarth
It is seven thirty-six: her train should be here in two minutes.
For a moment she thinks about how quiet the platform is, and how normally she has to fight to get on the train in the evening.
She hears the train in the dark tunnel and tells herself to wake up and to focus for another forty minutes.
The train speeds out of the tunnel, and she enjoys the feeling of the wind in her dark brown hair
The train starts, and she shakes her head.
Then the train stops at another station
After a few more minutes she feels the train stop and she is aware of the kids getting off.
You just need to get home, she tells herself, and she feels the train slow down, and she knows she must get up.
I will, she thinks, but only if the strange man stays on the train
For a few seconds she walks and then turns back to look at the tube train
The train starts again and she relaxes a little.
During the Oil Wars, they had to train us how to keep our minds strong, in case we were caught by people who wanted to change the way we thought."
By tomorrow evening, I should be on the train
The train would carry me away from Maxim, mile by mile
'We ought to have gone on the earlier train.' She looked at her watch
I'm going downstairs to arrange about her train
'Yes, but look! There's a train coming!' says Nathan.
The train is moving fast.
"It's going to feel like a freight train ramming straight through you," Vince said
'By train from Waterloo station,' replied Openshaw.
Griselda had gone to London by the cheap Thursday train
She arrived back by the 6.50 train.'
'You'll miss your train if you are not careful,' interrupted Gladys.
'The train!'
A train from London was standing in the station and the train for London was just coming in
Dr Stone climbed on the train just before it started.
'He was lucky not to miss his train,' he said
And the 6.50 train was half an hour late! I didn't get home until half-past seven.'
'She returned from London on the 6.50 train.'
'But that train was half an hour late
So she must have come back on an earlier train.' She looked at me
I failed to find Lord Hilton at his house, but was told he was expected from London by the six o'clock train
Quite a number of people who had been expecting friends to arrive by train were standing at the station
They were described as, 'great machines like spiders, nearly thirty metres high, as fast as an express train, and able to shoot out a beam of strong heat.'
After trying unsuccessfully to get onto a train at Chalk Farm my brother came out into the road, pushed through the hurrying lines of vehicles, and had the luck to be at the front of a crowd which was taking bicycles from a shop
The younger woman suggested that they should move on and catch a train at St Albans
They just used to rush off to work - I've seen hundreds of them, with a bit of breakfast in their hand, running to catch their train, frightened they'd be sacked if they didn't
'The Martians will probably make pets of some of them; train them to do tricks - who knows? And some, maybe, they will train to hunt us.'
The first rush had already ended and there were few people on the train
The line on the London side of Woking station was still being repaired, so I got off the train at Byfleet and took the road to Maybury, past the place where I had seen the Martian fighting- machine in the thunderstorm
That night Holmes and I took a train to Norbury
At Waterloo Station, we took the 11:05 train to Kingston
'However, there's a train that leaves Pangbourne after five o'clock
'Goodbye, my lady!' I called, as the train moved off.
On the train Miss Halcombe told me everything that had happened since she last wrote to me.
I put the other letter in my pocket and ran to the station to get the first train to London
On the train, I opened the other letter