The subway system is usually just referred to as the trains. Locals say I can take the train to your place to generally mean that they take the subway. The subway is never referred to as the metro, underground, or tube.
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subway, also called underground, tube, or métro, underground railway system used to transport large numbers of passengers within urban and suburban areas.
In terms of strict dictionary definitions, both terms imply underground trains. Subway is a generic term, but metro is more localized to certain cities. Subway is generally used for underground train systems and metro for above ground.
A city's underground railway system is usually called the underground (often the Underground) in British English and the subway in North American English. Speakers of British English also use subway for systems in American cities and metro for systems in other European countries.
A subway is not technically a train, but the tunnel and track where the subway train runs—similar to how a monorail train is a type of train, but a monorail is not a train, but the thing the monorail train runs on. Some people use the word “subway” to mean subway train, though. There are many types of trains.
In Manhattan, the trains follow the grid system, and even when they don't in the outer boroughs, stations are named after the streets that they're on. There is, however, one peculiarity: while the subway trains are named after letters of the alphabet, several letters are missing.
The Tremont Street subway in Boston's MBTA subway system is the oldest subway tunnel in North America and the third oldest still in use worldwide to exclusively use electric traction (after the City and South London Railway in 1890, and the Budapest Metro's Line 1 in 1896), opening on September 1, 1897.
For New York, I have mostly seen subway, for DC it's metro, for Boston and Pittsburgh it's the T, for Chicago it's the L. In terms of strict dictionary definitions, both terms imply underground trains. Subway is a generic term, but metro is more localized to certain cities.
Usually 'subway' when we're talking about the system in general, such as when we don't know what lines we're going to take Hey, want to take the subway or catch a cab? If we know the lines, then we just use the name/number We can take the L to the N/R or we can catch a cab.
The subway system is usually just referred to as the trains. Locals say I can take the train to your place to generally mean that they take the subway.
Every station has multilingual ticket machines where you can buy a one-way fare ticket, or you can use a rechargeable IC card to swipe in and out of the ticket gates. Tokyo Metro and Toei have teamed up to offer a subway pass for tourists that can save you some yen, as well as being super convenient.