An insulation, padding, or stiffening fabric, either sewn to the wrong side of the lining or the inner side of the outer shell fabric The interlining is used primarily to provide warmth in coats, jackets, and outerwear
- Interlining is used in two ways: Interlining allows the use of the same revenue vehicle and/or operator on more than one route without going back to the garage Interlining is often considered as a means to minimize vehicle requirements as well as a method to provide transfer enhancement for passengers For interlining to be feasible, two (or more) routes must share a common terminus or be reasonably proximate to each other (see DEADHEAD)
This means you have a connecting flight with two different airlines You leave home on one airline, connect somewhere enroute and take a completely different airline for the remainder of your trip Although they work together, each airline operates separately under their own rules and regulations Sometimes you can check your baggage straight through, but often you will have to retrieve your luggage at the connection airport and recheck it onto your next carrier
Two or more motor carriers working together to haul a shipment to a destination Carriers may interchange equipment but usually they rehandle the shipment without transferring the equipment
An interactive computer code used to predict rail routes for radioactive waste [see radioactive waste definition] shipments in the United States (ORNL/TM-12090 INTERLINE 5 0-An Expanded Railroad Routing Model: Program Description, Methodology, and User's Manual 1993 ) Back to Top
To write or insert between lines already written or printed, as for correction or addition; to write or print something between the lines of; as, to interline a page or a book