1. Voiture.
2. Partie mobile. Chariot d'imprimante.
ETYM Old Fren. cariage luggage, carriage, chariage carriage, cart, baggage, French charriage, cartage, wagoning, from Old Fren. carier, charier, French charrier, to cart. Related to Carry.
1. A machine part that carries something else.
2. A wheeled vehicle drawn by horses; SYN. equipage, rig.
3. Characteristic way of bearing one's body; SYN. bearing, posture.
ETYM AS. craet; cf. W. cart, Irish and Gael. cairt, or Icel. kartr. Related to Car.
A heavy open vehicle usually having two wheels and drawn by an animal.
ETYM French Chariot, from char car. Related to Car.
1. A light four-wheeled horse-drawn ceremonial carriage.
2. A two-wheeled horse-drawn battle vehicle; used in war and races in ancient Egypt and Greece and Rome.
Horse-drawn carriage with two wheels, used in ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome, for fighting, processions, and races; it is thought to have originated in Asia. Typically, the fighting chariot contained a driver and a warrior, who would fight on foot, with the chariot providing rapid mobility.
Julius Caesar and Tacitus both write of chariots being used by the British against Roman armies in the 1st century AD. The most complete remains of a chariot found in Britain were at Llyn Cerrig Bach in Anglesey, Wales, but many parts of chariots, such as axle caps and harness mounts, have been found.
1. A wheeled platform for moving heavy objects.
2. A wheeled support on which a camera can be mounted.
3. Doll
4. A compact narrow-gauge railroad locomotive for moving construction trains and for switching
In e-commerce programs, a file in which an online customer stores information on potential purchases until ready to order. Usually represented on screen with a drawing of a shopping cart, the virtual shopping cart provides a recognizable point of reference to users new to the e-commerce experience. See also e-commerce.
A handcart that holds groceries while shopping.
1 dialect England; a cart of any of various kinds
2. A device that carries electric current from an overhead wire to an electrically driven vehicle
3. A streetcar powered electrically through a trolley — called also trolley car
4. A wheeled carriage running on an overhead rail or track
5. chiefly British; a cart or wheeled stand used for conveying something (as food or books)
Chiefly British variant of WAGON.
ETYM Dutch wagen. Related to Wain.
1. A child's four-wheeled toy cart sometimes used for coasting; SYN. coaster wagon.
2. Any of various kinds of wheeled vehicles drawn by a horse or tractor; SYN. waggon.