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The Toyota Platz (Japanese:トヨタ・プラッツ, Toyota Purattsu) is a subcompact car that was manufactured in Japan by Toyota from 1999 until 2005, when it was replaced by the Belta. Designated by Toyota as the XP10 series, the Platz was also sold in export markets as either the Toyota Yaris or Toyota Echo.
The Toyota Yaris (Japanese: トヨタ・ヤリス, Hepburn: Toyota Yarisu) is a supermini/subcompact car sold by Toyota since 1999, replacing the Starlet and Tercel. Up to 2019, Toyota had used the Yaris nameplate on export versions of various Japanese-market models, with some markets receiving the same vehicles under the Toyota Echo name ...
Toyota claims the contrived name Yaris is "intended to convey a European impression", while Echo "is intended to Echo nothing." [9] Instead of conventional analogue instruments, the Vitz utilized digital instruments which were mounted in a "pod" in the center of the dashboard. When sales commenced in the Canadian market this was not the case ...
Toyota Echo/Platz: 2000 2005 Toyota Esquire: 2014 2021 Toyota Estima/Previa: 1990 2019 Toyota Etios: 2010 2023 Toyota FA: 1954 1978 Toyota FJ40: 1960 1984 Toyota FJ Cruiser: 2006 2022 Toyota Fun Cargo: 2000 2004 Toyota Gaia: 1998 2004 Toyota Grand HiAce/Granvia: 1999 2002 Toyota Hilux Surf: 1983 2009 Japanese version of the 4Runner Toyota Ipsum ...
The Toyota ECHO was a global vehicle sold in Asia and Europe under the name Yaris. It attracted young American buyers in the first year of its launch, but the average age would creep up in subsequent years. The ECHO has since been replaced by the global brand Yaris nameplate.
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Scion was a marque of Toyota that debuted in 2003 and was available only in the United States and Canada. The marque was intended to appeal to younger customers: the Scion brand emphasized inexpensive, stylish, and distinctive sport compact vehicles, and used a simplified "pure price" sales concept that eschewed traditional trim levels and dealer haggling.