Ronnie and his father spent the weekend making a model of a Roman chariot. The word chariot is a noun, and is a form of transportation.
I'll see you at the chariot races! I am upgrading to a two-horse chariot.
The word chariot is a noun.
chariot is a noun such as the man road the chariot
The chariot race will be held this weekend.The escaped slave was run down with the general's chariot.Boadicea often rode a chariot into battle against the Romans.
it is chariot
lal lolo
Not a phrase but a single word: the usual term for a chariot race is curriculum, from currus meaning a chariot. You asked for the plural form - curricula.
The horses shied and the man was thrown halfway out of his chariot.
a word in a poem by Percy Bysshe Shelly
In ancient Greece, the Hippodrome was a great place to see a chariot race.
Chariot is the English equivalent of 'currum'. The Latin word is a masculine gender noun. The particular form in the example is in the accusative case, as the direct object of the verb. The nominative form is 'currus', as the subject of the sentence.
In Rome the chariot races were held mainly in the Circus Maximus. There was also the Circus Flaminius for races. A clue is the word "circus", which means racecourse. Any Roman structure with the word "circus" in its name, would be a racecourse.