viaduct• Now one of Dirkin's friends liesdead beside a viaduct.• They left the station to the south on a viaduct.• The great and impregnablefortress is accessible by means of four highways built on loftyviaducts.• After a few yards the sea appears once more on your left, and in the distance, a railway viaduct crossing the bay.• We're at the base of a greystone railway viaduct.• Now we're off along some alleys, cutting westtill we reach the railway viaduct.• The train is seen crossing Rumtickle viaduct near Thurgoland in October 1984.• Between the viaduct and the seafront you crush the brittleflowers underfoot.
Originviaduct
(1800-1900)Latinvia“way, road” + English-duct (as in aqueduct)