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carload

/kahr-lohd/US // ˈkɑrˌloʊd //

车载量,车载,车重,车载货物

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the amount carried by a car, especially a freight car.
    • : the legal minimum weight entitling a railroad shipper to a rate lower than that charged for less than this weight.

Examples

  • Rather than delivering grain to the starving cities, or necessary war materiel to the front, Russia’s anemic railroad system was clogged by carloads of vodka.

  • For the most part, a carload of randy frat boys causes Metro Vice more headaches than the CES crowd.

  • He recalls calling a meeting when “American Gypsies were flooding in by the carload” to Milwaukee.

  • A carload of German tourists had been killed the week before; there was nothing to stop them.

  • I believe they are going to get hauled by the carload in November.

  • Then they dumped in carload after carload of rock and gravel; but the muskeg absorbed it and waited for more.

  • She had a carload of groceries, and I helped her put them in the house.

  • Paper could not be obtained for printing, and a carload of brown wrapping paper was used.

  • Only low-grade and long haul carload traffic can profitably be concentrated.

  • Nor can local business in less than carload lots profitably be concentrated beyond a certain point.