释义 |
truck
truck 1 T0385500 (trŭk)n.1. Any of various heavy motor vehicles designed for carrying or pulling loads.2. A hand truck.3. a. A wheeled platform, sometimes equipped with a motor, for conveying loads in a warehouse or freight yard.b. A set of bookshelves mounted on four wheels or casters, used in libraries.4. a. One of the swiveling frames of wheels under each end of a railroad car or trolley car.b. Either of the frames housing a pair of wheels on a skateboard or landboard.5. Nautical A small piece of wood placed at the top of a mast or flagpole, usually having holes through which halyards can be passed.6. Chiefly British A railroad freight car without a top.v. trucked, truck·ing, trucks v.tr. To transport by truck.v.intr.1. To carry goods by truck.2. To drive a truck.3. Slang To move or travel in a steady but easy manner. [Short for truckle or from Latin trochus, iron hoop (from Greek trokhos, wheel).]
truck 2 T0385500 (trŭk)v. trucked, truck·ing, trucks v.intr. To have dealings or commerce; traffic: They were trucking with smugglers.v.tr. Archaic 1. To exchange; barter.2. To peddle.n.1. The trading of goods or services without the exchange of money; barter.2. a. Articles of commerce; trade goods.b. Garden produce raised for the market.c. Informal Worthless goods; stuff or rubbish: "I was mooning over some old papers, or letters, or ribbons, or some such truck" (Edna Ferber).3. Informal Dealings; business: We'll have no further truck with them. [Middle English trukien, from Old North French troquer.]truck (trʌk) n1. (Railways) Brit a vehicle for carrying freight on a railway; wagon2. US and Canadian and Austral a large motor vehicle designed to carry heavy loads, esp one with a flat platform. Also called (esp in Britain): lorry 3. (Railways) a frame carrying two or more pairs of wheels and usually springs and brakes, attached under an end of a railway coach, etc4. (Nautical Terms) nautical a. a disc-shaped block fixed to the head of a mast having sheave holes for receiving signal halyardsb. the head of a mast itself5. any wheeled vehicle used to move goodsvb6. to convey (goods) in a truck7. (intr) chiefly US and Canadian to drive a truck[C17: perhaps shortened from truckle2]
truck (trʌk) n1. (Commerce) commercial goods2. dealings (esp in the phrase have no truck with)3. (Commerce) commercial exchange4. (Commerce) archaic payment of wages in kind5. miscellaneous articles6. informal rubbish7. (Agriculture) US and Canadian vegetables grown for marketvb8. (Commerce) archaic to exchange (goods); barter9. (intr) to traffic or negotiate[C13: from Old French troquer (unattested) to barter, equivalent to Medieval Latin trocare, of unknown origin]truck1 (trʌk) n. 1. a usu. large motor vehicle for carrying goods and materials, consisting either of a single self-propelled unit or of a trailer vehicle hauled by a tractor unit. 2. any of various wheeled frames, platforms, or carts used for transporting heavy objects. 3. hand truck. 4. a group of two or more pairs of wheels in one frame, for supporting one end of a railroad car, locomotive, etc. 5. Brit. a freight car having no top. 6. a small wooden wheel, cylinder, or roller, as on certain old-style gun carriages. 7. a popular dance with shuffling, jitterbuglike steps. v.t. 8. to transport by truck. 9. to put on a truck. v.i. 10. to convey articles or goods on a truck. 11. to drive a truck. 12. to dance with jitterbuglike steps. 13. Informal. to proceed, esp. in an unhurried or jaunty manner. [1605–15; back formation from truckle wheel. See truckle2] truck′a•ble, adj. truck2 (trʌk) n., v. trucked, truck•ing. n. 1. vegetables raised for the market. 2. miscellaneous articles of little worth. 3. dealings: I'll have no truck with him. 4. barter. 5. a bargain or deal. 6. the payment of wages in goods instead of money. v.t. 7. to exchange; trade; barter. v.i. 8. to exchange commodities. 9. to traffic; have dealings. [1175–1225; Middle English trukien to exchange < Old North French *troquer, akin to Occitan trucar, Sp trocar to barter] truck- roo bar - An Australian term for a metal bar on the front of a car or truck that prevents the vehicle from being damaged in the event of a collision with an animal (such as a kangaroo).
- snow groomer - A truck or other vehicle, either with tracks running along both sides or dragging equipment behind, used to maintain ski hills and groom (pack down) snow.
- truck farm - Refers to the sense of truck as "commodities for sale," and, later, "garden produce for market."
- truck - Formed by combining Latin trochos, "wheel," and Greek trechein, "to run," it originally referred to a wooden wheel.
carriage car">car truck wagon">wagon1. 'carriage'Carriage is one of several nouns which are used to refer to vehicles pulled by railway engines. In British English, a carriage is one of the separate sections of a train that carries passengers. The man left his seat by the window and crossed the carriage to where I was sitting.2. 'car'In American English, these sections are called cars. In British English, car used to be part of the name of some special kinds of railway carriage. For example, a carriage might be called a dining car, a restaurant car, or a sleeping car. These terms are no longer used officially, but people still use them in conversation. 3. 'truck' and 'wagon'In British English, a truck is an open vehicle used for carrying goods on a railway. ...a long truck loaded with bricks.In American English, this vehicle is called a freight car or a flatcar. The train, carrying loaded containers on flatcars, was 1.2 miles long....the nation's third-largest railroad freight car maker.In British English, a wagon is a vehicle with a top, sides and a sliding door, used for carrying goods on a railway. The pesticides ended up at several sites, almost half of them in railway wagons at Bajza station.In American English, vehicles like these are usually called boxcars. A long train of boxcars, its whistle hooting mournfully, rolled into town from the west.A truck is also a large motor vehicle used for transporting goods by road. See lorry - truck
lorry truck1. 'lorry'In British English, a lorry is a large vehicle used for transporting goods by road. The lorries were carrying 42 tonnes of sand.2. 'truck'In American English, a vehicle like this is called a truck. In British English, small open lorries are sometimes called trucks. A blue truck drove up and delivered some boxes.truck Past participle: trucked Gerund: trucking
Present |
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I truck | you truck | he/she/it trucks | we truck | you truck | they truck |
Preterite |
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I trucked | you trucked | he/she/it trucked | we trucked | you trucked | they trucked |
Present Continuous |
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I am trucking | you are trucking | he/she/it is trucking | we are trucking | you are trucking | they are trucking |
Present Perfect |
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I have trucked | you have trucked | he/she/it has trucked | we have trucked | you have trucked | they have trucked |
Past Continuous |
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I was trucking | you were trucking | he/she/it was trucking | we were trucking | you were trucking | they were trucking |
Past Perfect |
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I had trucked | you had trucked | he/she/it had trucked | we had trucked | you had trucked | they had trucked |
Future |
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I will truck | you will truck | he/she/it will truck | we will truck | you will truck | they will truck |
Future Perfect |
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I will have trucked | you will have trucked | he/she/it will have trucked | we will have trucked | you will have trucked | they will have trucked |
Future Continuous |
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I will be trucking | you will be trucking | he/she/it will be trucking | we will be trucking | you will be trucking | they will be trucking |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been trucking | you have been trucking | he/she/it has been trucking | we have been trucking | you have been trucking | they have been trucking |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been trucking | you will have been trucking | he/she/it will have been trucking | we will have been trucking | you will have been trucking | they will have been trucking |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been trucking | you had been trucking | he/she/it had been trucking | we had been trucking | you had been trucking | they had been trucking |
Conditional |
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I would truck | you would truck | he/she/it would truck | we would truck | you would truck | they would truck |
Past Conditional |
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I would have trucked | you would have trucked | he/she/it would have trucked | we would have trucked | you would have trucked | they would have trucked | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | truck - an automotive vehicle suitable for haulingmotortruckbumper - a mechanical device consisting of bars at either end of a vehicle to absorb shock and prevent serious damagedump truck, dumper, tip truck, tipper lorry, tipper truck, tipper - truck whose contents can be emptied without handling; the front end of the platform can be pneumatically raised so that the load is discharged by gravityfire engine, fire truck - any of various large trucks that carry firemen and equipment to the site of a firedustcart, garbage truck - a truck for collecting domestic refuse; "in Britain a garbage truck is called a dustcart"camion, lorry - a large truck designed to carry heavy loads; usually without sidesautomotive vehicle, motor vehicle - a self-propelled wheeled vehicle that does not run on railspickup, pickup truck - a light truck with an open body and low sides and a tailboardroof - protective covering on top of a motor vehiclesound truck - a truck equipped with a loudspeaker and used for advertisinganti-sway bar, stabilizer bar - a rigid metal bar between the front suspensions and between the rear suspensions of cars and trucks; serves to stabilize the chassistailboard, tailgate - a gate at the rear of a vehicle; can be lowered for loadingtow car, tow truck, wrecker - a truck equipped to hoist and pull wrecked cars (or to remove cars from no-parking zones)tractor - a truck that has a cab but no body; used for pulling large trailers or vansarticulated lorry, tractor trailer, trailer truck, trucking rig, rig, semi - a truck consisting of a tractor and trailer togethercar transporter, transporter - a long truck for carrying motor vehiclesvan - a truck with an enclosed cargo space | | 2. | truck - a handcart that has a frame with two low wheels and a ledge at the bottom and handles at the top; used to move crates or other heavy objectshand truckhandcart, pushcart, cart, go-cart - wheeled vehicle that can be pushed by a person; may have one or two or four wheels; "he used a handcart to carry the rocks away"; "their pushcart was piled high with groceries" | Verb | 1. | truck - convey (goods etc.) by truck; "truck fresh vegetables across the mountains"transport - move something or somebody around; usually over long distances |
trucknoun1. lorry, juggernaut, HGV (Brit.), heavy goods vehicle, pick-up, van, dumper, pick-up truck, articulated lorry, dumper truck, pantechnicon (old-fashioned), tipper truck, bakkie (S. African) Now and then they heard the roar of a heavy truck.2. dealings, business, association, contact, relations, communication, traffic, connection, transactions, intercourse, trade He would have no truck with deceit.Translationstruck (trak) noun1. a railway vehicle for carrying goods. (鐵路上用的)無蓋貨車 (铁路上用的)无盖货车 2. (especially American) a lorry. He drives a truck; (also adjective) a truck-driver. 卡車(的) 卡车(的) truck → 卡车zhCN, 货车zhCN, 载重卡车zhCN- Could you send a tow truck? (US)
Can you send a breakdown van? (UK) → 您能不能派一辆维修车来?
truck
fall off a truckOf goods or merchandise, to be acquired by illegal or dubious means; to come into (someone's) possession without being paid for. Danny says he has several laptops and smartphones he wants to sell for cheap—sounds like they fell off a truck to me.See also: fall, off, truckfall off the back of a truckOf goods or merchandise, to be acquired by illegal or dubious means; to come into (someone's) possession without being paid for. Danny says he has several laptops and smartphones he wants to sell for cheap—sounds like they fell off the back of a truck to me.See also: back, fall, of, off, truckfall off the turnip truckTo be gullible, naïve, or unsophisticated. The subject is often a person from a rural or rustic background. Mary has no idea about how to act in polite society, always behaving as if she just fell off the turnip truck.See also: fall, off, truck, turniphave truck withTo work well with or associate with someone. The phrase is most commonly used in the negative ("have no truck with") to describe someone or something that will not work together. Let me call that office—I used to work there, so I have truck with them. That lowlife has no truck with us, so tell him not to come around here anymore.See also: have, truckoff the back of a truckLikely by illegal or dubious means. Said of the way something has been gotten. Primarily heard in US, Australia. A: "Jake's been peddling a bunch of flat screens for a great price." A: "He probably got them off the back of a truck. I wouldn't go for them, if I were you." Danny says he has several laptops and smartphones he wants to sell for cheap—sounds like they fell off the back of a truck to me.See also: back, of, off, truckhave no truck with (someone or something)To not be involved with someone or something. Oh, I have no truck with him anymore, not since our fight.See also: have, no, truckcould drive a truck through (something)Could easily show or exploit the flaws in something. Primarily heard in US. Oh please, I could drive a truck through that lawyer's incoherent argument, and I plan to do just that in court tomorrow.See also: could, drive, through, truckfall off the cabbage truckTo be gullible, naïve, or unsophisticated. The subject is often a person from a rural or rustic background. Mary has no idea about how to act in polite society, always behaving as if she just fell off the cabbage truck.See also: cabbage, fall, off, truckwant no truck with (someone or something)To want to avoid someone or something. I hope Ned won't be there—I want no truck with him since our fight.See also: no, truck, wantkeep on truckingA phrase of encouragement that one keep going or persisting with something, Come on, the project is not a total failure—keep on trucking! Keep on trucking, honey—tomorrow's another day.See also: keep, on, truckgut truckslang A food truck, a truck or van outfitted to be a mobile kitchen used to prepare and sell food at various locations. Everyone in the office likes to get food from the gut truck that parks outside at lunchtime, but I don't really care for anything they serve. There's a gut truck that always comes around to the dorms and frats in the evening to sell munchies to the stoned college students.See also: gut, truckhave no truck with somethingRur. to have nothing to do with something. After the way Mary treated me, I'll have no truck with her. We only show good, wholesome movies at this theater. We have no truck with most of that Hollywood trash.See also: have, no, truckjust fell off the turnip truckRur. ignorant; unsophisticated. He stood there gawking at the buildings in town like he just fell off the turnip truck. My cousin acts like she just fell off the turnip truck.See also: fell, just, off, truck, turnipkeep on truckingInf. to continue to do well; to continue to try. Just keep on trucking, man. All I can do is keep on trucking.See also: keep, on, truckhave no truck withHave no dealings with, as in The doctor said he wanted no truck with midwives. This term was first recorded in 1868, although truck in the sense of "dealings" dates from the early 1600s. See also: have, no, truckcan drive a truck through something AMERICAN, INFORMALIf you can drive a truck through something such as an agreement, contract or argument, it has serious weaknesses or faults. In my view, Miller's fiscal plan is so thin you could drive a truck through it. Note: You can also say that something has weaknesses big enough to drive a truck through. Clearly, there were loopholes in the system big enough to drive a truck through.See also: can, drive, something, through, truckhave no truck with something/someone COMMON If you have no truck with something or someone, you disapprove of them and refuse to become involved with them. As an American, she had no truck with the formality of English life. Great efforts were made to get him on the side of the rebels. He had no truck with them. Note: The verbs want and hold are sometimes used instead of have. Most traditional doctors hold no truck with these ideas. Note: `Truck' is an old term which referred to trading goods by bartering. `To have no truck with someone' literally means to have no dealings with them. See also: have, no, someone, something, truckhave (or want) no truck with 1 avoid dealing or being associated with. 2 be unsympathetic or opposed to. The earliest sense of truck was ‘trading by the exchange of commodities’ (from French troquer , meaning ‘barter’), from which developed the sense ‘communication or dealings’.See also: have, no, truckkeep on trucking used as an encouragement to keep going, not to give up. informal 2004 Something Awful His most prized possession is a Denny 's dinner plate which was signed by Gene Roddenberry reading, ‘Dear Harlan, keep on trucking, some day you'll get the hang of this whole writing thing, sincerely Gene.’ See also: keep, on, truckhave/want no ˈtruck with somebody/something (British English) not want to deal with or be involved with somebody/something: He’ll have no truck with anyone on the political left.See also: have, no, somebody, something, truck, wantKeep on trucking sent. Keep doing what you are doing.; Keep taking care of business. Keep on trucking. Things’ll get better. See also: keep, on, truckfall off the cabbage truckTo be a nai¨ve newcomer. Imagine a flatbed farm wagon laden with fresh produce arriving in a city. Sliding off the back was a country bumpkin whose brain, or so smug sophisticated urbanites would agree, contained no more clue about worldly ways than a head of cabbage that might roll off the vehicle. A similar expression was to say that someone “just got off the boat,” a reference to immigration in the days of steamship passage when new arrivals were thoroughly ignorant of New World customs. Among the snappy denials to being called a hick or greenhorn were “I wasn't born yesterday” or “I might have been born at night, but not last night” or the wonderfully imaginative Midwestern comeback, “Hey, what makes you think I just got off the noon balloon from Rangoon?”See also: cabbage, fall, off, truckhave no truck withAvoid. “Truck” came from the French woes for “barter.” Originally, if you had no truck with somebody, you refused to trade with him or her. By extension it came to mean you refused to have anything to do with the person.See also: have, no, trucktruck
truck, automotive vehicle designed primarily for the transportation of goods. A truck is constructed on the general lines of the automobile but uses larger and heavier parts. It may be powered by a gasoline internal-combustion engine or a diesel engine. In some trucks propulsion is supplied through a single front or rear axle, in others through two rear axles, and in still others through both front and rear axles. Many trucks have automatic or semiautomatic transmissions. Smaller trucks are built as a single unit, but larger trucks are frequently combinations of a truck tractor, which contains an engine, transmission, and cab, and a semitrailer, which is a trailer that the tractor hauls. The semitrailer has no forward axle, so that its front end must be supported by a swivel mount, known as the fifth wheel, which is found on the rear of the truck tractor. A full trailer, which can be attached to the rear of a semitrailer, has a front axle and one or two rear axles. In other countries, such as Australia, as many as three trailers may be attached to a single tractor. In the United States most states place restrictions on the length of trucks, on the maximum weight that may be carried on a single axle, and on the addition of trailers, though some states still allow up to three trailers. Despite these restrictions, truck traffic accounts for ever-larger percentages of accidents and road damage. As common carriers, motor trucks have made serious inroads on the earnings of the railroads as they carry freight over increasingly long distances. In Asia and Africa, they have replaced the camel caravan and human carriers.Truck any of several types of motor vehicle, differing in load-carrying capacity, body type, wheel arrangement, and arrangement of the principal components, particularly of the cab in relation to the front axle. The maximum allowed weight of a trailer is indicated in the load-carrying capacity of the truck. For towing, the truck is outfitted with towing equipment (fifth wheel) and convenient connections to the trailer’s turn-signal and braking systems. Trucks are classified according to load-carrying capacity into very small, to 1 ton; small, I to 2 tons; medium, 2 to 5 tons; large, over 5 tons; and very large, which includes off-road trucks with load capacities exceeding limits set by the road clearances and road weight limits for trucks. For traffic safety on the roads and in the cities the length of a two-axle truck may not exceed 11 m. Trucks with more than two axles are limited to 12 m. and trucks with one or more full trailers are limited to a maximum of 22 m. None may exceed 2.5 m in width and 3.8 m in height. Higher load-carrying capacity may be achieved by increasing the number of axles (to three and four axles) or by using trailers or semitrailers. In the USSR the following load-carrying capacities are recommended for trucks and trailers: 0.5. I. 1.5, 3. 5. 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 25. 40. 60. and 100 tons. There are general-purpose and specialized trucks. The general-purpose trucks have a loading platform with a tail gate and removable side walls. The specialized trucks (including dump, van, and refrigerator trucks) have bodies designed for special purposes. Trucks and trailers with specialized bodies are usually adapted to carry one cargo or several similar cargos: these trucks include moving vans, gasoline tankers, cement-mixer trucks, timber carriers, cement carriers, and container carriers. To reduce loading and unloading effort some trucks are equipped with various power systems for lifting and lowering cargo, moving the body or back gate and sides, rearranging and moving the cargo within the body of the carrier, or performing other operations. Trucks are constructed with emphasis on the concept of component systems, including such components as engines, transmissions, running gear, and steering. The most common truck systems have the cab behind the engine or the cab over the engine. The latter is popular especially among the trucks of larger load capacity, because of its more correct weight distribution in relation to its axles both in the loaded and empty condition. It also provides the longest load-carrying platform for total truck length. For the more complete matching of the truck to a load, a model is usually issued in several wheel-base lengths. The chassis with the shortest wheelbase is used for dump trucks, which move loose, large-volume loads, and for tractor-trailer power units. Chassis with long wheelbases are used for large truck bodies, which provide good load-carrying properties even with light but bulky loads. Trucks with a particularly small load capacity (vans and pickups) are usually built on a passenger car chassis or on their partial assemblies. Trucks of small to medium load capacity usually use carbureted gasoline engines, transmissions with single or dual-range final drives, hydraulic or hy-dropneumatic brakes, leaf spring suspensions both front and back, and no power steering. Trucks of large and extra large load capacity are usually equipped with diesel engines, mechanical, hydromechanical or electromechanical transmissions, pneumatic or pneumohydraulic brakes with braking-rate retarders, and hydraulically assisted steering. The principal characteristics of several Soviet trucks are shown in Table 1. In the USSR trucks are made in several motor-vehicle plants, including the Ul’ianov (UAZ), Gorky (GAZ), Moscow (ZIL), Urals (Ural), Minsk (MAZ), Kutaisi (KAZ), Kremenchug (KrAZ), and Byelorussia (BelAS) plants. The basic models built by these plants include the UAZ-451 DM (load-carrying capacity of 1 ton), GAZ-53A (4 tons), ZIL-130 (5 tons), Ural-377 (7.5 tons), MAZ-500 (8 tons), KAZ-608 (tractor trailer power unit), and KrAZ-257 (12 tons). These form the basis for many modified types, including dump trucks, cross-country trucks, and tractor-trailers. The Byelorussia motor-vehicle factory builds quarry dump trucks of particularly large capacity, including the BelAZ-540 (27 tons), BelAZ-548 (40 tons), and BelAZ-549 (65 tons). The trend of truck development is toward further adaptability to the special needs of operating conditions. For trucks of small and medium load capacity attention is particularly directed toward greater maneuverability and acceleration and reduced height in relation to load. For the trucks of large load capacity the trend is toward maximizing the load-carrying capacity within the existing weight limitations. Effort is also directed toward ensuring docking maneuverability of systems in which the trailer is as big as the truck itself. In power units, more powerful and economical engines of lighter weight are being developed. High speed diesel engines are enjoying increasing popularity. Trucks of large capacity are being considered for gas turbine application. The use of atom power (atomvehicle) is difficult because of need for complicated physiological shielding. Automatic transmissions and diesel-electric transmission with electric motor drives on each wheel (motor-wheel) are beginning to be used somewhat more widely. Their use reduces the pollution of city air with toxic substances of combustion products. Much attention is given to the reduction of steering effort (power steering), traffic safety (improved brakes, visibility, and signaling), reduction of labor-intensive work in maintenance and repair, and the improvement of the reliability of the truck structure. REFERENCESAfanas’ev, L. L. Avtomohil’nye perevozki. Moscow, 1965. Avtomobilestroenie SSSR. Moscow, 1967. Anokhin. V. I. Otechestvennve avtomobili, 3rd ed. Moscow. 1968.Table 1. Truck characteristics |
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| Load capacity of truck (tons) |
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up to 1.0 | 1.5 | 3 | 5 | 8 | 12 |
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Minimum width of truck deck (mm)............. | – | 1,900 | 2,200 | 2,200 | 2,200 | 2,200 | Minimum length of truck deck (mm)............ | – | 3,000 | 3,800 | 4,500 | 5,200 | 7,000 | Maximum loading height (mm).................. | 900 | 1,150 | 1,200 | 1,200 | 1,400 | 1,400 | Minimum clearance (mm)....................... | 175 | 200 | 240 | 260 | 270 | 270 | Acceleration to 50 km/hr (sec)............... | 15 | 15 | 15 | 25 | 25 | 35 | Maximum speed (km/hr)........................ | 110 | 100 | 90 | 90 | 85 | 75 | Truck-weight/load ratio...................... | 1.25 | 1.15 | 0.8 | 0.7 | 0.65 | 0.65 | Size of tires (inches)....................... | 600–13 | 8.40–15 | 7.00–18 | 7.50–20 | 8.25–20 | 11.00–20 | Ostrovtsev, A. N. Osnovy proektirovaniia avtomobilei. Moscow, 1968. Milushkin, A. A. Tekhniko-ekspluatatsionnye trebovaniia k perspek-tivnomu gruzovomu podvizhnomu sostavu avtomobil’nogo transporta. Moscow, 1968. Velikanov, D. P. Effektivnost’ avtomobilia. Moscow, 1969. Chagette, J. Technique automobile, 3rd ed. Paris, 1953.L. L. AFANAS’EV truck[trək] (mechanical engineering) A self-propelled wheeled vehicle, designed primarily to transport goods and heavy equipment; it may be used to tow trailers or other mobile equipment. (mining engineering) barney truck11. Brit a vehicle for carrying freight on a railway; wagon 2. a frame carrying two or more pairs of wheels and usually springs and brakes, attached under an end of a railway coach, etc. 3. Nauticala. a disc-shaped block fixed to the head of a mast having sheave holes for receiving signal halyards b. the head of a mast itself
truck21. commercial goods 2. commercial exchange 3. Archaic payment of wages in kind MedicalSeeTruckingTRUCK
Acronym | Definition |
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TRUCK➣Time of observation, Route or location, Unusual activity, Communication to law enforcement and Keep under observation (Ohio Highway Patrol) |
See TRKtruck Related to truck: TurckSynonyms for trucknoun lorrySynonyms- lorry
- juggernaut
- HGV
- heavy goods vehicle
- pick-up
- van
- dumper
- pick-up truck
- articulated lorry
- dumper truck
- pantechnicon
- tipper truck
- bakkie
noun dealingsSynonyms- dealings
- business
- association
- contact
- relations
- communication
- traffic
- connection
- transactions
- intercourse
- trade
Synonyms for trucknoun an automotive vehicle suitable for haulingSynonymsRelated Words- bumper
- dump truck
- dumper
- tip truck
- tipper lorry
- tipper truck
- tipper
- fire engine
- fire truck
- dustcart
- garbage truck
- camion
- lorry
- automotive vehicle
- motor vehicle
- pickup
- pickup truck
- roof
- sound truck
- anti-sway bar
- stabilizer bar
- tailboard
- tailgate
- tow car
- tow truck
- wrecker
- tractor
- articulated lorry
- tractor trailer
- trailer truck
- trucking rig
- rig
- semi
- car transporter
- transporter
- van
noun a handcart that has a frame with two low wheels and a ledge at the bottom and handles at the topSynonymsRelated Words- handcart
- pushcart
- cart
- go-cart
verb convey (goods etc.) by truckRelated Words |