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  2. 5 Temu Items Retirees Should Buy When Black Friday Arrives - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/5-temu-items-retirees-buy...

    Heavy Duty Folding Wagon Cart. Price: $19.74. There are endless ways retirees can use a heavy-duty folding wagon cart to make things a bit easier. Whether it’s to help with groceries, carry ...

  3. Baggage cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baggage_cart

    Baggage carts are usually built out of steel and equipped with three or four wheels. For safety reasons, they are generally fitted with a brake. [citation needed] Usually, a handle has to be pushed down in order to move the cart, however, in some cases, such as London airports, the handle activates the brake. Very few carts, e.g. in developing ...

  4. Britzka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britzka

    The term is a variant of the Polish term bryczka, a "little cart", from bryka, "cart", possibly coming into English via several ways, including German Britschka and Russian brichka (бричка). The Great Western Railway engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel used a black britzka as a mobile office whilst surveying the route of the railway ...

  5. Hand truck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_truck

    A hand truck. A hand truck, also known as a hand trolley, dolly, stack truck, trundler, box cart, sack barrow, cart, sack truck, two wheeler, or bag barrow, is an L-shaped box-moving handcart with handles at one end, wheels at the base, with a small ledge to set objects on, flat against the floor when the hand truck is upright. [1]

  6. Horse-drawn vehicle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse-drawn_vehicle

    A two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle is a cart (see various types below, both for carrying people and for goods). Four-wheeled vehicles have many names – one for heavy loads is most commonly called a wagon. Very light carts and wagons can also be pulled by donkeys (much smaller than horses), ponies or mules.

  7. Carriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carriage

    Coach of a noble family, c. 1870 The word carriage (abbreviated carr or cge) is from Old Northern French cariage, to carry in a vehicle. [3] The word car, then meaning a kind of two-wheeled cart for goods, also came from Old Northern French about the beginning of the 14th century [3] (probably derived from the Late Latin carro, a car [4]); it is also used for railway carriages and in the US ...

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