Comments by "Laurence Fraser" (@laurencefraser) on "Found And Explained"
channel.
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Properly speaking, the 'train' is the part that 'follows along behind'... on railways, the locomotive is not 'the train', and calling it Part of the train is already debatable (though camel trains, wagon trains, and multiple units all blur things a little such that you can include the leader, in this case the locomotive, as part of the train).
If they're being pushed rather than following behind, then they're not really a train... though we might still call them such if they have enough similarities to the archtype (which, these days, would be a locomotive hauled railway train). if the barges are attached to each other more than one wide the analogy breaks down entirely so they don't count that way either.
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