different between tractor vs wagon
tractor
English
Etymology
Formed from Latin tractus, perfect passive participle of trahere (“to pull”), + agent noun suffix -or.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?t?ækt?/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?t?ækt?/
- Rhymes: -ækt?(?)
Noun
tractor (plural tractors)
- (agriculture) A vehicle used in farms e.g. for pulling farm equipment and preparing the fields.
- (agriculture) A movable coop without a floor to allow for free ranging.
- (US) A truck (or lorry) for pulling a semi-trailer or trailer.
- Any piece of machinery that pulls something.
- (aviation) An airplane where the propeller is located in front of the fuselage
- (Britain, rail transportation) A British Rail Class 37 locomotive.
- (archaic) A metal rod used in tractoration, or Perkinism.
Related terms
Descendants
- ? Japanese: ????? (torakut?)
- ? Khmer: ????????? (trakt??)
- ? Korean: ??? (teuraekta)
- ? Russian: ???????? (tráktor), ????????? (tráktor)
- ? Armenian: ??????? (traktor)
- ? Azerbaijani: traktor
- ? Chinese:
- Cantonese: ??????? (to1 laai1 gei1)
- Dungan: ??????? (tu?laži)
- Mandarin: ??????? (tu?l?j?)
- Min Nan: ??????? (thoa-la-ki / tho-la-ki)
- ? Bouyei: toylayjiy
- ? Burmese: ???? ????? (htau lagyi)
- ? Tibetan: ??????? (tho la ci)
- ? Zhuang: dohlahgih
- ? Dungan: ??????? (traktor)
- ? Georgian: ???????? (?rak?ori)
- ? Ingrian: traktora, traktori
- ? Kazakh: ??????? (traktor)
- ? Korean: ???? (tteurakttoreu) (North Korea)
- ? Kyrgyz: ??????? (traktor)
- ? Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: ??????? (traktor)
- Uyghurjin: ????????? (traktor)
- ? Tajik: ??????? (traktor)
- ? Turkmen: traktor
- ? Uyghur: ????????? (traktor?)
- ? Uzbek: traktor
- ? Thai: ????????? (tr??k-dt???)
Translations
See also
- (aviation): pusher
- (agriculture): traction engine
Verb
tractor (third-person singular simple present tractors, present participle tractoring, simple past and past participle tractored)
- (transitive, agriculture) To prepare (land) with a tractor.
- (transitive, science fiction) To move with a tractor beam.
- (transitive, medicine, archaic) To treat by means of tractoration, or Perkinism.
Asturian
Etymology
Borrowed from English tractor, formed from Latin tractus + the suffix -or.
Noun
tractor m (plural tractores)
- (agriculture) tractor (farm vehicle)
Catalan
Noun
tractor m (plural tractors)
- (agriculture) tractor (farm vehicle)
Related terms
- treure
Further reading
- “tractor” in Diccionari de la llengua catalana, segona edició, Institut d’Estudis Catalans.
- “tractor” in Gran Diccionari de la Llengua Catalana, Grup Enciclopèdia Catalana.
- “tractor” in Diccionari normatiu valencià, Acadèmia Valenciana de la Llengua.
- “tractor” in Diccionari català-valencià-balear, Antoni Maria Alcover and Francesc de Borja Moll, 1962.
Dutch
Etymology
From English tractor.
Pronunciation
Noun
tractor m (plural tractoren or tractors, diminutive tractortje n)
- tractor (agricultural vehicle)
- Synonym: trekker
Latin
Verb
tractor
- first-person singular present passive indicative of tract?
References
- tractor in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
Portuguese
Noun
tractor m (plural tractores)
- Superseded spelling of trator. (superseded in Brazil by the 1943 spelling reform and by the Orthographic Agreement of 1990 elsewhere. Still used in countries where the agreement hasn’t come into effect and as an alternative spelling in Portugal.)
Romanian
Etymology
From French tracteur.
Noun
tractor n (plural tractoare)
- tractor
Declension
Spanish
Etymology
Borrowed from English tractor, formed from Latin tractus, perfect passive participle of trahere (“to pull”), + agent noun suffix -or.
Adjective
tractor (feminine tractora, masculine plural tractores, feminine plural tractoras)
- driving
Noun
tractor m (plural tractores)
- tractor
Related terms
- traer
Further reading
- “tractor” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.
tractor From the web:
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- what tractors require def
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wagon
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Dutch wagen, from Middle Dutch wagen, from Old Dutch *wagan, from Proto-Germanic *wagnaz (“wagon”), from Proto-Indo-European *wo??nos (“wagon, primitive carriage”), from *we??- (“to transport”). Cognate with Danish vogn (“wagon”), German Wagen (“vehicle; wagon”), Saterland Frisian Woain (“wagon”), West Frisian wein (“wagon”), Swedish vagn (“wagon”). Doublet of wain (inherited from Old English wæ?n) and related also to way, weigh.
Sense 9 (“woman of loose morals; obnoxious woman”) is probably a derogatory and jocular reference to a woman being “ridden”, that is, mounted for the purpose of sexual intercourse.
The verb is derived from the noun.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?wæ?(?)n/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?wæ??n/
- Rhymes: -æ??n
- Hyphenation: wa?gon
Noun
wagon (plural wagons)
- A four-wheeled cart for hauling loads. [from late 15th c.]
- A four-wheeled child's riding toy, pulled or steered by a long handle attached to the front.
- An enclosed vehicle for carrying goods or people; (by extension) a lorry, a truck.
- An enclosed vehicle used as a movable dwelling; a caravan.
- Short for dinner wagon (“set of light shelves mounted on castors so that it can be pushed around a dining room and used for serving”).
- (slang) Short for paddy wagon (“police van for transporting prisoners”).
- (rail transport) A freight car on a railway.
- Synonym: (Britain) goods wagon
- (chiefly Australia, US, slang) Short for station wagon (“type of car in which the roof extends rearward to produce an enclosed area in the position of and serving the function of the boot (trunk)”); (by extension) a sport utility vehicle (SUV); any car.
- (Ireland, slang, derogatory, dated) A woman of loose morals, a promiscuous woman, a slapper; (by extension) a woman regarded as obnoxious; a bitch, a cow.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:promiscuous woman
- (mathematics) A kind of prefix used in de Bruijn notation.
- (slang) Buttocks.
Alternative forms
- wagan, waghen (obsolete)
- waggon (Britain, dated)
Derived terms
Descendants
- ? Dutch: wagon
- ? French: wagon (see there for further descendants)
- ? German: Waggon
- ? Japanese: ???, ??? (wagon)
- ? Polish: wagon
- ? Spanish: vagón
Translations
Verb
wagon (third-person singular simple present wagons, present participle wagoning, simple past and past participle wagoned)
- (transitive, chiefly US) To load into a wagon in preparation for transportation; to transport by means of a wagon.
- (intransitive, chiefly US) To travel in a wagon.
Derived terms
- wagoning, waggoning (noun)
Translations
References
Further reading
- wagon on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- wagon in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)
Anagrams
- Gowan, gowan, wango, wonga
Dutch
Alternative forms
- waggon (archaic)
Etymology
Borrowed from English waggon, from Dutch wagen, from Middle Dutch wagen, from Old Dutch *wagan, from Proto-Germanic *wagnaz (“wagon”), from Proto-Indo-European *wo??nos. The pronunciation was likely influenced by French wagon, which was also borrowed from English.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?a????n/
- Hyphenation: wa?gon
- Rhymes: -?n
Noun
wagon m (plural wagons, diminutive wagonnetje n)
- A train car, a wagon (railway carriage, a nonpowered unit in a railroad train).
Derived terms
- goederenwagon
- personenwagon
- metrowagon
- tramwagon
- treinwagon
- veewagon
Related terms
- wagen
Descendants
- ? Indonesian: wagon
French
Etymology
From English waggon, from Dutch wagen.
Pronunciation
- (Belgium) IPA(key): /wa.???/
- (France, Switzerland) IPA(key): /va.???/
Noun
wagon m (plural wagons)
- a railway carriage (note that the word voiture is preferred for passenger transport)
Descendants
- ? Czech: vagón
- ? Italian: vagone
- ? Khmer: ???????? (vaagong)
- ? Lao: ????? (w? kong)
- ? Portuguese: vagão
- ? Russian: ?????? (vagón) (see there for further descendants)
- ? Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ???????
- Latin: vàg?n
- ? Slovak: vagón
- ? Slovene: vagon
- ? Turkish: vagon
Further reading
- “wagon” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Indonesian
Etymology
From Dutch wagon, from English waggon, from Dutch wagen, From Middle Dutch wagen, from Old Dutch wagan, from Proto-Germanic *wagnaz, from Proto-Indo-European *wo??nos, from *we??-. Doublet of wahana.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?wa??n], [?wa?on]
- Hyphenation: wa?gon
Noun
wagon (first-person possessive wagonku, second-person possessive wagonmu, third-person possessive wagonnya)
- car (a railway carriage, a nonpowered unit in a railroad train).
Alternative forms
- wahon
Further reading
- “wagon” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI) Daring, Jakarta: Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa, Kementerian Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia, 2016.
Japanese
Romanization
wagon
- R?maji transcription of ???
- R?maji transcription of ???
Old Saxon
Alternative forms
- wogon
- -wagian (found in witharwagian (to flow back))
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *wag?n?.
Verb
wag?n
- to sway
Polish
Etymology
From French wagon, from English waggon, from Dutch wagen, from Middle Dutch wagen, from Old Dutch *wagan, from Proto-Germanic *wagnaz, from Proto-Indo-European *wo??nos.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?va.??n/
Noun
wagon m inan
- (rail transportation) car (a railway carriage, a nonpowered unit in a railroad train)
- (colloquial) truckload
Declension
wagon From the web:
- what wagon should i buy
- what wagons are worth the most rdr2
- what wagons are allowed at disneyland
- what wagons have a third row
- what wagon means
- what is the best wagon to buy
- what is the best used wagon to buy
- what is the best station wagon to buy
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