PDX
Translingual
Symbol
PDX
- (international standards, aviation) IATA airport code for Portland International Airport, which serves Portland, Oregon, United States.
- 1998, Kim Carlson, Portland Best Places, 4th edition, Seattle, Wash.: Sasquatch Books, →ISBN, ISSN 1095-9742, OCLC 39102886, OL 8697133M, page 310:
- Vans depart from PDX every 15 minutes, from 5:30am to 12:30am.
- 2007, Serena Bartlett, Diana Morgan, Portland: New View of the Rosy City, GrassRoutes Travel, →ISBN, LCCN 2007934507, OCLC 170033828, OL 11839434M, page 16:
- A 2007 global real estate forecast report has projected Portland to be among the top 10 office markets for investors, and if that is not enough incentive, PDX has been named the best airport for business travel by readers of Conde Nast Traveler magazine.
- 2010, Dana Haynes, Crashers (Fiction), New York: Minotaur Books, →ISBN, LCCN 2009046155, OCLC 731349164, OL 23936527M, page 27:
- A jetliner in Vancouver, British Columbia, waited a full ninety minutes for John Roby to land and switch planes before taking off for PDX.
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English
Etymology
From the IATA airport code PDX, by extension.
Proper noun
PDX
- Portland, Oregon.
- 2003, South Corridor, I-205/Portland Mall Light Rail Project: Environmental Impact, OCLC 53082761, page 174:
- The first line ran along I-84 to downtown PDX (we should learn our lessons from this route, as it made NE Burnside Ave. a poor route for cars, an unsafe route for bicyclists/pedestrians[...]Maybe it could have avoided downtown PDX, if we'd have known how conveniently streetcars can move people through several developed neighborhoods[...]
- 2007, Serena Bartlett, Diana Morgan, Portland: New View of the Rosy City, GrassRoutes Travel, →ISBN, LCCN 2007934507, OCLC 170033828, OL 11839434M, page 147:
- Launch Pad is one of the hippest, hottest galleries in PDX, a place where the artists go to check each other out.
- 2010, Hollyanna McCollom, Portland (Moon Handbooks), →ISBN, OCLC 298781732, OL 25962017M, page 80:
- After a full day of doing whatever it is we do around PDX, what we need is a drink—and maybe some $2.50 chicken strips—served up with a “Hey, how are ya?” kind of smile.
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