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Volkswagen (1953–present) Honda. Jaguar e Land Rover Brasil. Mitsubishi. Neta. Nissan. Renault (Produces Dacia Vehicles as well) Stellantis for Brands Citroën, Fiat, Jeep and Peugeot, as well as imported RAM. Suzuki.
List of Lamborghini automobiles. List of Lamborghini concept vehicles. List of Lancia concept cars. List of Lexus vehicles. List of Indianapolis 500 pace cars. List of Lincoln vehicles. List of most expensive cars sold at auction. List of Stellantis vehicles. List of longest consumer road vehicles.
The currently active brands from the "Big Three" manufacturers (Ford, General Motors and Stellantis) are shown below. Founded in 1899 as 'Buick Auto-Vim and Power Company' and acquired by General Motors in 1908. Founded as Henry Ford Company in 1901, renamed to Cadillac following Henry Ford 's departure in 1902. Acquired by General Motors in 1909.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... Pages in category "Car brands" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of ...
Rear-wheel-drive luxury sedan available in hybrid and fuel cell hydrogen powertrains. S235 (crossover) 2022. Japan, North America and others. All-wheel-drive luxury crossover sedan marketed in Japan and North America. Oldest Toyota passenger car nameplate still in use. Hybrid powertrain is standard. Mirai.
ICKX: see DR (2022) IKCO (1962) IM Motors (2020) Ineos Automotive (2017) Infiniti (1989) Intermeccanica (1959) Ioniq (2020) Isdera (1969)
Automobile manufacturers are companies and organizations that produce motor vehicles. Many of these companies are still in business, and many of the companies are defunct. Only companies that have articles on Wikipedia are included in this list. The list is sorted by country of origin. This article contains dynamic lists that may never be able ...
OICA, however, lists Mazda separately from Ford. Including Mazda's production, Ford would still be the 2nd-largest auto manufacturer, larger than Toyota (with Lexus, Daihatsu, and Hino), by 2004, as well as the 3rd largest, larger than the Volkswagen Group, in 2007 (and possibly the first half of 2008).