bdNorth East.co.uk

R J Matthew Haulage Ltd.

Address

Unit R Newington Industrial
Estate, London Road Newington
Sittingbourne
Kent
NE9 7NU



Email: -
TELEPHONE NUMBERS
PIN Tel: pin tel. no.
Main Tel: -
Fax No.: -
company phone details

R J Matthew Haulage Ltd. Details:

Dormant.

Google Map for R J Matthew Haulage Ltd.

Other Businesses near R J Matthew Haulage Ltd.  Unit R Newington Industrial, Estate, London Road Newington, Sittingbourne, Kent, NE9 7NU


View more companies near R J Matthew Haulage Ltd. (NE9 7NU)....

Information about words in this company name or address

r

1. the 18th letter of the English alphabet, a consonant.
2. any spoken sound represented by the letter R or r, as in ran, carrot, or rhyme.
3. something having the shape of R.
4. a written or printed representation of the letter R or r.
5. a device, as a printer''s type, for reproducing the letter R or r.
6. See three R''s.
1. Chem.radical.
2. Math.ratio.
3. regular: a man''s suit or coat size.
4. Elect.resistance.
5. restricted: a rating assigned to a motion picture by the Motion Picture Association of America indicating that children under the age of 17 will not be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. Cf. G , PG, PG–13, X.
6. Theat.stage right.
7. Physics.roentgen.
8. Chess.rook.
1. the 18th in order or in a series, or, when I is omitted, the 17th.
2. the medieval Roman numeral for 80. Cf. Roman numerals.
3. Biochem.arginine.
4. Physics.See universal gas constant.
5. registered trademark: written as superscript ® following a name registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

j

J originated as a swash character to end some Roman numerals in place of i. There was an emerging distinctive use in Middle High German. Gian Giorgio Trissino was the first to explicitly distinguish I and J as representing separate sounds, in his Ɛpistola del Trissino de le lettere nuωvamente aggiunte ne la lingua italiana of 1524. Originally, both I and J repesented ; but Romance languages developed new sounds that came to be represented as I and J; therefore, English J, acquired from the French J, has a sound value quite different from /j/ .

matthew

A surname.
This famous surname derived from Mattathiah is recorded in over two hundred and fifty different spellings ranging from Mathieu of France to Macieiczyk of Poland. From medieval times it has been recorded in every part of Christendom. Its popularity throughout Europe first as a baptismal name and then later as a surname dates from the 11th century when Crusaders, otherwise known as the "Knights Templar", returning from one of their many expeditions to the Holy Land, gave it to their sons in commemoration of the fathers attempt to free Palestine from the Muslims. The origination is from the Hebrew male given name "Mattathiah" meaning "gift of the Lord", and it is recorded in the famous Norman-English Domesday Book of 1086 as ''Matthaeus'' and in the French spelling ''Mathieu''. Neither of these recordings are surnames, but names of priests. Early examples of the surname recordings include Heinrich Matthaus of Uberlingen, Germany, in 1382, John Mathows of Whitby, England, in 1395, the patronymic Hugh Mathewman in the 1379 Poll Tax rolls of England, and a similar Clewi Mathisen of Freiburg, Germany, in the year 1475. Samuell Matthews was one of the earliest settlers in the New World of America. He is listed as ''living at the plantation by James Cittie'' , in February 1623. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Alan Mathew, which was dated 1260, in the Assize Rolls of Cambridge, England. This was during the reign of King Henry 111, known by the nickname of ''The Frenchman'', who reigned from 1216 to 1272.

haulage

1. the act or labor of hauling.
2. the amount of force expended in hauling.
3. a charge made, esp. by a railroad, for hauling equipment, commodities, etc.
The business of being a haulier or hauler , also called haulage contractor, common carrier, contract carrier, or private carrier, in other words of transporting goods by road or rail for other companies or one''s own company.
The horizontal transport of ore, coal, supplies, and waste, also called cartage or drayage. The vertical transport of the same with cranes is called hoisting.
The charges made for hauling freight on carts, drays, lorries, or trucks.
Haulage cost is the cost of loading raw ore at a mine site and transporting it to a processing plant.

Haulage rights is the arrangement where one railway, supplying cars, may negotiate rates with customers located on another railway''s line, the road granting haulage rights. This differs from trackage rights in that the host railway operates the trains for the other railway, where with trackage rights, the secondary railway operates trains over the host''s track.
1. draw, haul, haulage, pull, pulling
usage: the act of drawing or hauling something; "the haul up the hill went very slowly"


sittingbourne

Sittingbourne is an industrial town about eight miles east of Gillingham in England, beside the Roman Watling Street off a creek in the Swale, a channel separating the Isle of Sheppey from mainland Kent. The town is growing rapidly due to a number of large residential developments, and its train line links to London Victoria, the journey taking about an hour from Sittingbourne railway station.

Sittingbourne owes its name to a modernised version of an observation on its location. The town''s name came from the fact that there is a small stream or "bourne" running underground in part of the town. Hasted writing in the 1790s in his History of Kent states that:“ Sittingbourne was anciently written Sedingbourne, in Saxon, Saedingburga, i.e. the hamlet by the bourne or small stream.