A sedan (or saloon here in UK) has an engine compartment, a passenger compartment and a separate boot (or trunk as I imagine you would want to call it). A 'small' car is dependent much more on the market for which it is destined. What you might call 'small' in US, might well be considered medium size here. What we would call 'small' would typically be under 13' 3" long (4mtr in continental-speak), and would normally have an engine size of 1.3ltrs.
Such vehicles would be:
Ford Ka
Smart
Vauxhall Corsa
Renault Twingo
Citroen C1
Nissan Micra.
Invariably, small cars in UK have a hatchback tailgate arrangement, rather than a separate boot, as this is what market forces demand.
They both refer to the same thing. Sedan is a North American term and Saloon is a British term.
A sedan. -The difference is simply that 'saloon car' is British terminology and 'sedan' is American.
the sedan 745 Li is 5 inches longer than the 745 i gives the rear passengers more leg room, the 745 Li was built with the intention to be a limo sedan and or vip sedan , the car fails the category of limo vip sedan because the high cost in repairs.
Size and passenger room. Nano means very small.
There is no such model as Town Coupe. There is the Lincoln Continental Town Car which is a large 4 door sedan. The Lincoln Continental Mark V is the coupe version of that car.
Sedan car donation tax is 500 dollars.
Chevrolet 4 dr. sedan
The difference is well regular cars are small and vans are bigger and shaped sorta like a rectangle and can hold more.
They are distinctly different, trust me. Whether your car has two or four doors has real bearing on the shape of your hood. They are not interchangeable, we know from experience.
The question is not specific enough as it does not mention exactly what it is that needs to be transported. If it happens to be a car that they want to transport, the weight or model of the car is needed because there is a difference between a sedan or a pick-up truck.
Example sentence - His description of the vehicle led us to believe it was a sedan car.
Nope, not enough current. Tried it yesterday and failed.