carryall
IPA: kˈɛrjʌɫ
noun
- (Canada, US) A large bag; a holdall
- (Canada, US, dated) A light, covered carriage drawn by a single horse
- (US) Any of several types of automobile, usually a station wagon or van built on a truck chassis.
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Examples of "carryall" in Sentences
- Carryall trucks with a nominal carrying capacity of a.
- In Canada, the term carryall is often also used to refer to a type of sleigh.
- It was of the "carryall" variety, except that it had but a single narrow seat.
- A carryall is a type of carriage used in the United States in the 19th century.
- They were also called 'carryall's' and 'suburbans' (a name Plymouth used on their wagons until the late 1970's).
- In the carryall were the farmer and his two charming daughters, and, Mrs. Stanhope, who was his sister-in-law, and her daughter Dora.
- Rumbling behind the carryall was the farm wagon containing the trunks, and in less than the half-hour stipulated by Sandy, Oak Farm was reached.
- à banc is a small, one-horse carriage, which looks upon the outside very much like what is called a carryall in America, only it is much narrower.
- We met many other mules, much more exemplary, in teams of two, three, and four, covered with bells and drawing every kind of carryall and stage and omnibus.
- Almost every resident in the country has a carriage they call a carryall, which name I suspect to be a corruption of the cariole so often mentioned in the pretty Canadian story of Emily Montagu.
- He had been thrown, sprawling, into the iron-railed "carryall" platform at the back of the buckboard, and lay on the nut-studded slats, where he was jolted and bumped about like the proverbial pea on a drum.
- Alone, there was insufficient room for the suffering man in the limited space of the "carryall," but beside him sat, or rather crouched, a burly Breed, ready at a moment's notice to quash any attempt at escape on the part of the wretched money-lender.
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