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freight
[ freyt ]
noun
- goods, cargo, or lading transported for pay, whether by water, land, or air.
- the ordinary conveyance or means of transport of goods provided by common carriers ( express ):
Shipping by freight is less expensive.
- the charges, fee, or compensation paid for such transportation:
We pay the freight.
Synonyms: haulage, freightage
- (especially in Britain) the cargo, or any part of the cargo, of a vessel; merchandise transported by water.
- Chiefly British. transportation of goods by water.
- Slang. cost or price, especially when high:
I'd like a larger house, but can't afford the freight.
verb (used with object)
- to load; burden:
a story heavily freighted with private meaning.
Synonyms: charge
- to load with goods or merchandise for transportation:
It took all night to freight the ship.
- to transport as freight; send by freight.
freight
/ freɪt /
noun
- commercial transport that is slower and cheaper than express
- the price charged for such transport
- goods transported by this means
- ( as modifier )
freight transport
- a ship's cargo or part of it
verb
- to load with goods for transport
- to convey commercially as or by freight
- to load or burden; charge
Derived Forms
- ˈfreightless, adjective
Other Words From
- freightless adjective
- over·freight verb (used with object)
- un·freighted adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of freight1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Refining locally will mean less freight costs but that’s a relatively small saving.
These range from hijackings of freight lorries delivering food to warehouses to the theft of 24 live lobsters from a storage pen in Scotland.
That was also the sentiment among people interviewed along the train tracks north of Mexico City, where migrants have long hopped rides north on the freight network known as La Bestia.
The whistle of a train interrupts the tourist chatter, and a steam engine pulling a long line of freight carriages slowly chugs across the railway bridge from Russia to North Korea.
They started to move east — “hundreds of thousands of men, women, children, and babies ... walking, hitchhiking, hopping freights,” as Paul Dickson and Thomas B. Allen reported in their 2004 book about the Bonus Army.
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