A table on which meals are served in a dining room
a table at which meals are served; "he helped her clear the dining table"; "a feast was spread upon the board"
A table is a type of furniture comprising an open, flat surface supported by a base or legs. It may be used to hold articles such as food or papers at a convenient or comfortable height when sitting, and is therefore often used in conjunction with chairs.
(Dining Tables) The first dining tables of which survivors remain are the type known as refectory tables. They are made usually of oak, and one of the earliest, at Penshurst Place in Kent, has a typical thick top of joined planks supported on three separate trestles.
a container for holding liquids while drinking
Any similar substance that has solidified from a molten state without crystallizing
A thing made from, or partly from, glass, in particular
a brittle transparent solid with irregular atomic structure
A hard, brittle substance, typically transparent or translucent, made by fusing sand with soda, lime, and sometimes other ingredients and cooling rapidly. It is used to make windows, drinking containers, and other articles
furnish with glass; "glass the windows"
forty-two: being two more than forty
"42" is an episode of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was first broadcast on BBC One on 19 May 2007, and is the eighth episode of Series 3 of the revived Doctor Who series.
Year 42 (XLII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
Historic St. Louis Railroad Museum (142)
This is a public dining car, and the china on the left side of the picture inside of the glass is original china that was used for people who were dining on the train.
The tour guide took us on a bunch of the passenger cars, and they were so luxorious!
This is the original crossing gate that used to be the railroad crossing entering the parking lot. Taken from the steamboat at the entrance of the museum.
My brother and I were staying at my grandparents' house for the weekend while my mom was running the Memphis Marathon and my dad was on a trip, so my awesome Grandpa took me and my brother to the St. Louis Museum of Transportation, which, since it mainline consists of trains, I call the St. Louis Railroad Museum.
These pictures were all taken at the St. Louis Railroad Museum. The St. Louis railroad museum is an amazing railroad museum. It wasn't all trains. It had one airplane, at the entrance, one steamboat at the entrance, and a few cars, but the rest of it was trains. The St. Louis Railroad Museum used to be a major railroad and streetcar stop in St. Louis, called Barret's Station. These are tracks that were built at the Museum (which is also the former site of Barret's Station, but none of the original track) to accommodate the rolling stock on display. The Union Pacific Jefferson City Sub (formerly Missouri Pacific) serves this place. The Jeff City Sub hosts 42 freight trains per day plus 4 additional Amtrak trains, making it one of the busiest lines in the St. Louis area. It used to run through a tunnel (which is now fenced off, but visible right by the museum) as a single track line, but when there were capacity constraints and height restrictions (I believe in the 1950s), the MoPac blasted through the hill and it is now double track, no longer a tunnel. There is a connection track to allow new rolling stock to It was an amazing museum with tons of awesome railroad stuff. It was a "Railfan's Paradise", LOL.