different between embankment vs railbank

embankment

English

Etymology

embank +? -ment

Noun

embankment (plural embankments)

  1. a long mound of earth, stone, or similar material, usually built for purposes such as to hold back or store water, for protection from weather or enemies, or to support a road or railway.

Derived terms

  • Victoria Embankment

Translations

embankment From the web:

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railbank

English

Etymology

rail +? bank

Noun

railbank (plural railbanks)

  1. An embankment adjacent to a railroad track.
    • 1990, United States Congress House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Department of the Interior and Related Agencies, Department of the Interior and related agencies appropriations for, p. 590:
      This 200-mile long stretch of railbank property has four encampments of the Lewis and Clark expedition.

Verb

railbank (third-person singular simple present railbanks, present participle railbanking, simple past and past participle railbanked)

  1. To convert an out-of-use railroad track into a trail for public use.
    • 2004, Joseph P. Schwieterman, When the Railroad Leaves Town, p. 223:
      [T]he municipal government moved ahead with plans to railbank the 5-mile segment between Astoria and Tongue Point under the guidelines of the National Trail Systems Act.

railbank From the web:

  • what does railbanked mean
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