expressway

[ik-spres-wey] /ɪkˈsprɛsˌweɪ/
noun
1.
a highway especially planned for high-speed traffic, usually having few if any intersections, limited points of access or exit, and a divider between lanes for traffic moving in opposite directions.
Also called limited access highway.
Compare superhighway.
Origin
1940-45; express + way
Examples from the web for expressway
  • Think about how firemen can put a forest system on the expressway to a supercritical collapse by putting out every fire.
  • The super information highway to a super information expressway.
  • It had a bubble top and it had fins on the back and it drove itself down the expressway.
British Dictionary definitions for expressway

expressway

/ɪkˈsprɛsˌweɪ/
noun
1.
a motorway
Word Origin and History for expressway
n.

c.1938, American English, from express (adj.) + way.

Encyclopedia Article for expressway

major arterial divided highway that features two or more traffic lanes in each direction, with opposing traffic separated by a median strip; elimination of grade crossings; controlled entries and exits; and advanced designs eliminating steep grades, sharp curves, and other hazards and inconveniences to driving. Frequently expressways have been constructed over completely new routes, passing near but not through large centres of population, on more or less direct lines between desired termini. Their advantages include high speed, greater safety, comfort and convenience for drivers and passengers, and lower vehicle operating costs. Many of these new express highways, especially in the United States, are toll roads, but that is an incidental, not an essential, feature.

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