View allAll Photos Tagged queueing
Queue: a line of people or vehicles waiting for something
Pictures + Dictionary = PICTIONARY - check out the series here
On the central pillar by the north door is the Blessed Virgin May holding the Crowned Christ in her arms.
Ticket desk with one of the old blue ropes on. Remember these across the doors to the screens before you were allowed in or had your ticket torn?
An usual evening at Nai Sadak, Old Delhi ( Delhi -6 ) ..
Old Delhi is called Delhi-6 because of its Pin number which is Delhi-110006. Lot of people have asked this question "why is it known as Delhi-6?"
Queues in front of Kew Gardens
Schlangen vor Kew Gardens
Sony Nex-7, Voigtländer Nex VM Adapter, Zeiss Biogon 25mm f2.8
Grantham, No Queue. The store is open, but unusually there is no queue to enter the restricted-numbers system. Unable to travel far I have been documenting my current home town during the 2020 Coronavirus lockdown. As the preventative extension is announced, the centre of town is near deserted - there are a few people around if you look carefully but most are staying away.
Grantham, Lincolnshire, England - Sainsbury's Store, London Road
April 2020
The massive queue... when we first joined it. Went all the way round the building(big building)then up a path, and finally to the entrance....
When coupled to each other, these five locomotives cover a stretch of track almost 200 feet long. It begins to gives you a sense of the massive scale of railway operations, when you examine a little fleet like this one at close range!
Montreal, QC – Stopped by Queue de Cheval (Horse's Tail) for dinner; it was quite the interesting place. The food was exceptional and the service pretty good. It’s not for the budget minded nor is for the traditionalist when it comes to atmosphere (there is something odd about listening to 80’s music while eating a $50 steak).
I ended up eating at “the bar” a circular charcoal grill where they cook most of the entrées. For the price of food I was expecting a lot; however I feel I was a little short changed. The main course was fantastic but unfortunately it did not translate through desert. My Crème Brule tasted more like lemon meringue and my coffee was luke warm and tasted “old”. I’d recommend eating dinner here but go somewhere else for dessert. One more interesting fact; Quebec and Canada’s sales tax comes to be around 14%.
A long queue for the Mersey Ferry. Busy day with the Caribbean Princess in for the day. 27th July 2013
Live 8 entry queue in front of us
PERMISSION TO USE: Please check the licence for this photo on Flickr. If the photo is marked with the Creative Commons licence, you are welcome to use this photo free of charge for any purpose including commercial. I am not concerned with how attribution is provided - a link to my flickr page or my name is fine. If used in a context where attribution is impractical, that's fine too. I enjoy seeing where my photos have been used so please send me links, screenshots or photos where possible. If the photo is not marked with the Creative Commons licence, only my friends and family are permitted to use it.
Tour Eiffel (Eiffel tower), Paris, France.
View from Eiffel tower down at the queue of people still waiting to be admitted to the tower.
Together with many other places at the Banks of the Seine in Paris, Eiffel tower is inscribed in the World Heritage List of the UNESCO.
text from whc.unesco.org/en/list/600/
"From the Louvre to the Eiffel Tower, from the Place de la Concorde to the Grand and Petit Palais, the evolution of Paris and its history can be seen from the River Seine. The Cathedral of Notre-Dame and the Sainte Chapelle are architectural masterpieces while Haussmann's wide squares and boulevards influenced late 19th- and 20th-century town planning the world over. "
When bad weather stops transport from the mainland and then starts again, the word soon gets around that the newspapers have arrived!!
2020 Weekly Alphabet Challenge, Week 17, Q for Queue
The Covid-19 reality of today, queueing with a 1.5 m/6ft distance to enter the supermarket.
There is audio as well for this photo, listen here »
visit aledigangi.com
No surprise that the government designates Taxi queues like an amusement park designates queues for rides. In fact, to flag down a taxi outside the designated que, you must pay a "flagdown fee" of about $2.50.
When I first came here, I thought that most singaporeans would take a taxi rather than walk 15 minutes. I can't tell whether that is the cause or the effect of Singapore having no grid system, but luckily no street is without a network of sidewalks, catwalks for crossing busy streets, and even frequent railings to make the pedestrian more comfortable among the recklessly overeager lane-changers in their clean cars. Singapore is clean--not astonishingly clean, but clean. Yet the cars here are impossibly clean. I never see a single car that is not immaculate. Parking garages look like dealership showrooms.
[update - some of my colleagues disagree with me, but I now think singaporeans are as likely to walk the city as residents of DC or NY would be. This varies with the individual, of course, but DC and NY have plenty of unwilling pedestrians. I'm the outlier for my inclination to cover miles on foot rather than using the provided transportation (children point at me from their carseats and ask, "why is that man walking?"). Yet I get to know these cities pretty quickly by walking everywhere.]