A caboose is the last car at the end of a train. Generally pained red, traditionally the caboose houses a man with a gun to protect the people on the train.
The caboose of something is the back end, so if you say 'the caboose of the train' it is the back car of the train, or if you were to say 'the caboose of that horse' you would be referring to it's rump.
The train was fifty cars long, including the caboose.
LOOSE caboose
The word "caboose" originates from the Dutch word "kombuis," which means "ship's galley" or "kitchen." It was later adopted into English to refer to the crew's quarters on a ship and eventually came to be used for the rear car of a train.
The plural of caboose is cabooses.
caboose
If tail is to rabbit, caboose is to train.
The plural form of caboose is cabooses.
yesterday i saw a broken caboose
Go to the castle and press the uptione and caboose
Tales of the Red Caboose was created in 1948.
The Little Red Caboose was created in 1953.