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covered wagon
noun
- a large wagon with a high, bonnetlike canvas top, especially such a wagon used by pioneers to transport themselves and their possessions across the North American plains during the westward migrations in the 19th century.
- British Railroads. a boxcar.
covered wagon
noun
- a large wagon with an arched canvas top, used formerly for prairie travel
covered wagon
- A typical conveyance for settlers moving west with their belongings. It was drawn by horses or oxen and equipped with a canvas cover, often supported by hoops, to keep off rain.
Word History and Origins
Origin of covered wagon1
Example Sentences
I doubted Dryden would last very long in a covered wagon out on the prairie.
The chef’s menu was inspired by the famous Ride to Rendezvous, a five-day Methow Valley horseback and covered wagon excursion by the Washington Outfitters and Guides every spring.
“That was such a hard time,” Girma gushes, as if Morgan, the most experienced player on the U.S. women’s World Cup team, rode to games in a covered wagon.
“It’s not just a question of sending the covered wagons from East to West and killing people along the way in order to settle the continent, take half of Mexico as you go,” he says.
“I said to somebody, ‘They think we’re coming over the Rockies in a covered wagon.’
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