Waggons

Word WAGGONS
Character 7
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Waggons"

What do we mean by waggons?

A four-wheeled cart for hauling loads.

A four-wheeled child's riding toy, pulled or steered by a long handle attached to the front.

An enclosed vehicle for carrying goods or people; (by extension) a lorry, a truck.

An enclosed vehicle used as a movable dwelling; a caravan.

Short for dinner wagon.

Short for paddy wagon.

A freight car on a railway.

Short for station wagon; (by extension) a sport utility vehicle (SUV); any car.

A woman of loose morals, a promiscuous woman, a slapper; (by extension) a woman regarded as obnoxious; a bitch, a cow.

A kind of prefix used in de Bruijn notation.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Waggons

  • Synonyms for waggons
  • Waggons synonyms not found!!!
  • Antonyms for waggons
  • Waggons antonyms not found!

The word "waggons" in example sentences

The fortunate people who had motor cars were travelling down the road, surrounded by people in waggons, in wheelbarrows, with their goods and chattels, hurrying away from the invaders coming in from the east. ❋ Unknown (1940)

One half of the 72nd Regiment was to proceed in waggons, the other by sea. ❋ Unknown (1903)

I knew the front of the 72nd Regiment in waggons would reach me in a day or two. ❋ Unknown (1903)

General Jackson conducted the retreat into Virginia, and suffered only a slight loss in waggons and artillery, and 300 wounded men. ❋ Unknown (1862)

Behind the waggons were the infantry, and behind the infantry the two carriages that had their windows and curtains tight closed against the cold. ❋ Cornwell, Bernard (1987)

On the other side, the waggons were a sight; shattered, and torn, and wrecked with shot; many of them burnt; several, huge as they are, flung upside down by the force of a shell bursting beneath them. ❋ L. March Phillipps (N/A)

In front of the waggons is a large, flat, open space, backed by bold rising ground with jutting crags and dotted clumps of luxuriant vegetation. ❋ Henry Rider Haggard (1890)

Alongside the waggons was a single large brown tent that for luxuriousness might have been the envy of all Gypsydom. ❋ Theodore Watts-Dunton (1873)

The fighting men are all on the top of the hill, and between them and the waggons are their ponies. ❋ Unknown (1867)

When our travellers first took up their night's lodgings in the waggons, they found their resting-places hard, after sleeping in comfortable beds at Cape Town; but now, after having passed their nights in the wide desert, their mattresses in the waggons were a luxury that was fully appreciated. ❋ Frederick Marryat (1820)

Does the misspelling of "waggons" have anything to do with the scoop? ❋ Unknown (2007)

Yet it was hard to know what kind of waggons would easily cross the deep drifts. ❋ Moorcock, Michael, 1939- (1989)

Round the palace lay bales of goods which had been ordered by him and sent out from England -- things such as waggons, motor-cars possibly, which are supposed so much to shock his narrow-minded subjects. ❋ Isabel Savory (N/A)

Articles which are not perishable, such as waggons, are supposed to be returned, but if they come back at all they are generally worthless. ❋ Henry Rider Haggard (1890)

The contents of several special trains, and hundreds of waggons, crowded the streets, the "waggons" frequently drawn by very handsome horses. ❋ Unknown (1867)

"After the Wet" rivers go down, the north-west monsoon giving place to the south-east Trades; bogs dry up everywhere, opening all roads; travellers pass through the stations from all points of the compass -- cattle buyers, drovers, station-owners, telegraph people -- all bent on business, and all glad to get moving after the long compulsory inaction of the Wet; and lastly that great yearly cumbrous event takes place: the starting of the "waggons," with their year's stores for ❋ Jeannie Gunn (1915)

Some few of them he would have found, a few hundred thousand, perhaps, their carcasses festering in the houses and in the deserted streets, and piled high on the abandoned death-waggons. ❋ Unknown (2010)

The streets were crowded with perils — waggons, carts, automobiles; great, straining horses pulling huge trucks; and monstrous cable and electric cars hooting and clanging through the midst, screeching their insistent menace after the manner of the lynxes he had known in the northern woods. ❋ Unknown (2010)

The next day, “Set out for Red-Stone-Creek, and were extremely perplexed, our waggons breaking very often.” ❋ David A. Clary (2011)

Dinwiddie told Washington that the other side was moving into Ohio more rapidly than expected, which made it “necessary for you to march what soldiers you have enlisted, immediately to the Ohio, and escort some waggons with the necessary provisions.” ❋ David A. Clary (2011)

Cross Reference for Waggons

  • Waggons cross reference not found!

What does waggons mean?

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