17 adjectives to describe elevators

He entered the vast marble vestibule of the Ararat Trust Building and walked toward the express elevator that was to carry him up to his office.

The benevolent elevator.

He whipped around and fired at the control panel next to the large central elevator.

Then comes a town deep in black muda straggly, inch-thick plank town, with dull red grain elevators.

It is reached by an enormous elevator which takes you up some two hundred feet, where there spreads before you a series of terraces, each with tables and diners, and above all the band-stand.

There are five patent safety-catch hydraulic elevators (or lifts).

I'm stuck in an idiotic elevator at 1008-1/2 Fifth Avenue.

Anticipating the wants of this route, there has been erected at Duluth, during the past season, an immense elevator, with a present capacity of over a third of a million of bushels, which, with a small additional expenditure, can be increased to a half million.

She might be in sorrow, in trouble; he could not wait, but leaped out of his office and ran down the long stairways, too hurried and restless to wait for the lagging elevator of the great building where he had suffered so much.

"Try the doors," said Zip at last, and walked to the nearest elevator.

One left one's hotel, with its very modern furniture, noisy elevators and telephones, and plunged into the wilderness where all was as it had been from the beginning.

The ornate, rococo elevator, as a matter of fact, was running away, upward, slowly at first.

The laws as to elevators, dangerous machinery, or dangerous employment generally, are even stricter, and as a rule apply to children of both sexes; the Massachusetts standard being, in the management of rapid elevators, the age of eighteen, in cleaning machinery in motion, fourteen, etc.; in other States, sixteen to eighteen.

His eyes opened wide as he saw the doors of the adjacent elevator closing on the escaped prisoners.

It was, indeed, at first extended to semi-private grain elevators on the prairies, to elevators monopolizing the water front of Buffalo, New York, and to floating elevators in New York Harbor, the first and last of which show certainly no element of legal monopoly, while the Buffalo case at most only a geographical one.

The concrete elevator, which is also combined with the scaffold, consists of a series of buckets carried upon two parallel endless chains passing over two pairs of wheels.

Do not let us for a moment imagine that because man is ceasing to remove his hat at her entrance into crowded elevators, or because he hustles her or allows her to hang by the straps in crowded cars, that he is tending to forget this supernaturalism of woman.

17 adjectives to describe  elevators