1A tractor or other vehicle equipped with continuous tracks.
履带式拖拉机(或车辆)
Example sentencesExamples
The Holt Tractor Company and the Best Tractor Company both took their heavy commercial tracklayers around 1916 and experimented by adding riveted boilerplates to the tractor chassis.
This recovery system separates collected rubber tracklayers into core metal and rubber, for the purpose of recycling them into iron materials and boiler fuels.
2North American
another term for trackman
Example sentencesExamples
About an hour later, a construction train arrived to unload cheerful gangs of tracklayers and graders, and then pulled away again.
The tracklayers moved forward at a furious pace, often laying down two to three miles of new rail a day, sometimes more.
At Ogallala, Nebraska, milepost 342, on May 27, 1867, they swooped down on the tracklayers while Dodge and government inspectors were present.
Completed and crossed by the tracklayers in November 1866, it was twenty-three hundred feet long.
Then the tracklayers came in, grabbing rails out of horse-drawn carts.
Relief tracklayers were standing by but the first crew was so proud of their work that a rest was not requested.
All the tracklayers were Caucasians and the Chinese simply looked on and cheered their favorite crew.
Definition of tracklayer in US English:
tracklayer
nounˈtrækˌleɪərˈtrakˌlāər
1A tractor or other vehicle equipped with continuous tracks.
履带式拖拉机(或车辆)
Example sentencesExamples
This recovery system separates collected rubber tracklayers into core metal and rubber, for the purpose of recycling them into iron materials and boiler fuels.
The Holt Tractor Company and the Best Tractor Company both took their heavy commercial tracklayers around 1916 and experimented by adding riveted boilerplates to the tractor chassis.
2North American
another term for trackman
Example sentencesExamples
The tracklayers moved forward at a furious pace, often laying down two to three miles of new rail a day, sometimes more.
Then the tracklayers came in, grabbing rails out of horse-drawn carts.
Relief tracklayers were standing by but the first crew was so proud of their work that a rest was not requested.
Completed and crossed by the tracklayers in November 1866, it was twenty-three hundred feet long.
About an hour later, a construction train arrived to unload cheerful gangs of tracklayers and graders, and then pulled away again.
At Ogallala, Nebraska, milepost 342, on May 27, 1867, they swooped down on the tracklayers while Dodge and government inspectors were present.
All the tracklayers were Caucasians and the Chinese simply looked on and cheered their favorite crew.