A four wheeled, closed horse drawn carriage is called a coach.
A four wheeled, closed horse drawn carriage is called a coach.
a carriage pulled by four horses with one driver
droshky
Phaeton - a light, four-wheeled open carriage, usually drawn by a pair of horses
kind of four-seater carriage with hood; Canadian, two-wheeled single-seater driving carriage.
A landau is a type of four-wheeled, convertible, horse-drawn carriage.
A four-wheeled vehicle, usually drawn by a single horse and with seats for four or more passengers, called a carryall carriage was used in the United States in the 19th century.
The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.The Romans had names for specific types of carriages just a we have names for specific types of motor cars such as a sedan, suv, van, etc. In Latin, the word for a carriage in general was "vehiculim". A "carpentum" or a "pilentum" was a small light usually two-wheeled carriage and a "raeda" or a "petorritum" was a larger, four wheeled traveling carriage, usually quite comfortable.
A four wheeled horse drawn carriage can have many different styles and names, just like a car. A horse drawn "carriage" is simply a four-wheeled, horse drawn conveyance...a two wheeled conveyance is called a "cart". You start to differentiate between a four wheeled "carriage" and a "wagon" by it's uses. Although certain styles of horse drawn "wagons" can also be considered a carriage, such as a wagonette or a hotel wagon, you would not necessarily call a delivery wagon, such as a hitch or express wagon, a "carriage". Like cars, many carriages were given names by their manufacturers that then stuck with other manufacturers (think "Coupe", for example, which originated with carriages). A coach, which is an enclosed carriage, was either made as a hard top (always enclosed), or an "auto-top", meaning the top could be folded down in good weather (like a convertible). Carriages that can never be enclosed, such as a Victoria, are never called "coaches".
A Latin equivalent of the English word 'car' is carrus. The Latin word is a masculine gender noun. Its literal meaning is 'a kind of four-wheeled baggage wagon'. Another Latin equivalent is carruca, which is defined as 'a kind of four-wheeled carriage'.
A berline is a sedan-type car, as popular in Quebec, Canada.