The members of the royal family rode in on carriages.
Those carriages are double parked!
"If the king and prince own different carriages" is not a sentence, it is a sentence fragment, an incomplete thought.The sentence, "The king and prince own different carriages." is a complete thought, a statement. The conjunction "if" introduces a conditional clause. By removing "if", the phrase is not conditional, it is a complete thought (sentence).This sentence can be correctly completed by replacing nouns with the following pronouns (in bold):"He and the prince own different carriages.""The king and he own different carriages.""They own different carriages.""The king and prince own them."
Instead of horses pulling carriages full of people, people pull carriages full of horses. (APEX) !/
People still use carriages today.
baby carriages = buggies or Prams
Before cars there were carriages pulled by horses. Before cars there were carriages pulled by horses. Before cars there were carriages pulled by horses.
Horse drawn carriages never stopped because they still have horse drawn carriages. Technology got more advanced and they started making cars and vehicles and so carriages became less popular.
Most carriages with horses are only used by poor people to collect garbage throughout the city and recycle what they need. Many carriages can be seen in Montevideo (Uruguay's capital) due to this.
carriages
Usually yes. There are laws that monitor the health and welness of horses that pull carriages.
The Romans did not go to the forum in carriages. They did not have carriages. Aristocratic women travelled with chariots.
Curious Carriages at Klobenstein - 1907 was released on: USA: April 1907