- Wagon
A wagon (in
British English , sometimes waggon) or dray is a heavy four-wheeledvehicle . Wagons were formerly pulled by animals such as horses, mules or oxen. Today farm wagons are pulled by tractors and trucks. Wagons are used fortransportation of people or goods. Wagons are distinguished fromcart s (which have two wheels), and from lighter four-wheeled vehicles such ascarriage s. A wagon could be pulled by one animal or by several, often in pairs.Sometimes, the word "wagon" is also used for
railroad car s (not motorized, for goods or passengers), and the word is a part / the usual short form ofstation wagon , the non-British term for a sedan (saloon) with an extended rear cargo area. Other names: estate (car) / shooting brake (UK), break (F), station sedan (Aus), Kombi (generally in German, in English also varied to combi), Variant (VW models), Caravan (GM'sOpel models), Avant (Audi 's wagons), Touring (BMW 's wagons).The word is also sometimes used as a colloquialism for any vehicle, particularly in the
British Military .ee also
*Araba
*Baby carriage
*Buckboard
*Carriage
*Cart
*Conestoga wagon
*Dolly
*Dolly (trailer)
*Go-cart
*Golf cart
*Hackney carriage
*Horse-drawn vehicles
*Forklift truck
*Lorry (horse-drawn)
*Omnibus
*Ox-wagon
*Perambulator
*Prairie schooner
* Radio Flyertoy wagon
*Soapbox
*Stagecoach
*Surrey
*Trolley (horse-drawn)
*Twenty mule team
*Vardo (gypsy wagon)
*Wagon train
*Wagon-wheel effect
*Wheel chair
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