释义 |
Definition of pushchair in English: pushchairnounˈpʊʃtʃɛːˈpʊʃˌtʃɛr British A folding chair on wheels, in which a baby or young child can be pushed along. 〈英〉折叠式婴儿(或幼儿)车 North American term stroller Example sentencesExamples - God forbid if any pushchairs or Zimmer frames attempted to get past us.
- If you live a few miles out of town, have a car, do not have young children with pushchairs and other paraphernalia, and do not plan to make bulky purchases, Park and Ride is a very good option.
- They told one woman pushing a baby in a pushchair that she had an ingenious pouch on wheels.
- You can understand the smaller shops being a bit narrow and pushchair unfriendly, but in general you expect the larger chains to be more amenable to parental shopping.
- When I had children, we had to take the baby in our arms and fold the pushchair to get on the bus.
- One pair of grandparents will buy the pram or pushchair and the other will get the cot.
- Most days I remember to weave the pushchair and us along, narrowly avoiding the squelch factor.
- Alex is too tall to fit in the backpack any more, and so we usually bring the pushchair along.
- The Evening Press published a letter yesterday from a reader whose pushchair was stolen.
- Bear in mind however, that not all are wheelchair and pushchair accessible.
- It was 1973 or maybe 74 and my sister and I were in our double pushchair, being wheeled along the Embankment in London by our mother, on an anti-Pinochet march, after the coup against Allende.
- Paul finally said when I calmed down; I shifted my stare quickly to the pushchair.
- The woman, who was pushing a pushchair with a child in it, was seen walking along the pavement of Easthouses Road, just before the junction with Maryburn Road, at around 5pm on the day the teenager was killed.
- The ferry accommodates cars, bikes, wheelchairs, pushchairs and foot passengers and the crossing takes roughly ten minutes.
- Because of insurance restrictions, no prams, pushchairs, baby joggers, pets, rollerskates or inline skates will be allowed on the course.
- As Tina Wright folded her pushchair yesterday, she turned around to see the bus drive off down a Colchester street without her.
- It was still dark, of course, and our coach was full of elderly nuns and young children in pushchairs, all carrying picnics and giant thermoses of tea.
- The dangerous stretch of road also poses problems for Matthew's sister who has to negotiate the road with a small child and pushchair.
- We wish to point out that we know from practical experience that neither the towpath nor the underpass are suitable for either a wheelchair or pushchair.
- Young mothers with pushchairs, disabled people in wheelchairs and, even worse, blind people with guide dogs are all forced on to the highway.
- Essentials such as pregnancy testing kits, a cot, pushchair, car seat and even stretch mark cream are then added to the cost.
- We have to slow right down when we drive our car on the road and I have problems pushing the pushchair.
- At one point the vehicle drove down a footpath at about 60 mph and narrowly missed a family, along with a baby in a pushchair.
- One drawback for us, however, was the lack of access for pushchair users.
- I feel I am being discriminated against because I am a working mother who doesn't drive so has to travel by bus with a baby in a pushchair during the rush-hour.
- On a rare weekday at home, I wander down to the market on my local high street, dodging young women with pushchairs and pensioners with canvas shopping-trolleys, and a shiver goes down my spine.
- I took my daughter in the pushchair before the polling booth opened.
- If anyone reading this knows someone who has recently acquired a lovely new pushchair, which doesn't belong to them, I should be grateful if they would contact the police.
- Middle-class, first-time parents will man the patrols with a three-wheel pushchair carrying their corn-fed, mop-topped urchins.
- Four children were among those pulled to safety from a burning block of flats by firefighters after ‘mindless’ vandals set fire to child's pushchair.
- Danielle's old pushchair is too small and her legs are all squashed up in it.
- The two are linked by a three-kilometre promenade, perfectly suited to an afternoon stroll with the pushchair.
- ‘The bag was on my granddaughter's pushchair before I entered the shop but was missing when I got to the till,’ she said.
- Has she ever tried to rush through York, manoeuvre a pushchair, or wheel a bike through town during the tourist season?
- It's not very nice either when people wheel through it with pushchairs and then have to fold them up and put them back in the boot of their cars.
- It is a lightweight, but strong, pushchair, invented so that mothers can go jogging without employing a sitter.
- The procession included babies in pushchairs, disabled people riding on electric scooters and young children walking.
- In their wisdom shop bosses decided that I, an elderly person with a shopping trolley, younger disabled people and young mums with pushchairs were not going to be customers.
- This latest pushchair again was pretty much the cheapest out there with the same criteria as the third.
- The path is tarmacked and flat and wide enough for a single wheelchair or pushchair.
Definition of pushchair in US English: pushchairnounˈpʊʃˌtʃɛrˈpo͝oSHˌCHer British A folding chair on wheels, in which a baby or young child can be pushed along; a stroller. 〈英〉折叠式婴儿(或幼儿)车 Example sentencesExamples - ‘The bag was on my granddaughter's pushchair before I entered the shop but was missing when I got to the till,’ she said.
- Paul finally said when I calmed down; I shifted my stare quickly to the pushchair.
- Most days I remember to weave the pushchair and us along, narrowly avoiding the squelch factor.
- At one point the vehicle drove down a footpath at about 60 mph and narrowly missed a family, along with a baby in a pushchair.
- Four children were among those pulled to safety from a burning block of flats by firefighters after ‘mindless’ vandals set fire to child's pushchair.
- You can understand the smaller shops being a bit narrow and pushchair unfriendly, but in general you expect the larger chains to be more amenable to parental shopping.
- I feel I am being discriminated against because I am a working mother who doesn't drive so has to travel by bus with a baby in a pushchair during the rush-hour.
- In their wisdom shop bosses decided that I, an elderly person with a shopping trolley, younger disabled people and young mums with pushchairs were not going to be customers.
- It is a lightweight, but strong, pushchair, invented so that mothers can go jogging without employing a sitter.
- Because of insurance restrictions, no prams, pushchairs, baby joggers, pets, rollerskates or inline skates will be allowed on the course.
- One pair of grandparents will buy the pram or pushchair and the other will get the cot.
- On a rare weekday at home, I wander down to the market on my local high street, dodging young women with pushchairs and pensioners with canvas shopping-trolleys, and a shiver goes down my spine.
- We have to slow right down when we drive our car on the road and I have problems pushing the pushchair.
- Alex is too tall to fit in the backpack any more, and so we usually bring the pushchair along.
- I took my daughter in the pushchair before the polling booth opened.
- Danielle's old pushchair is too small and her legs are all squashed up in it.
- One drawback for us, however, was the lack of access for pushchair users.
- This latest pushchair again was pretty much the cheapest out there with the same criteria as the third.
- The path is tarmacked and flat and wide enough for a single wheelchair or pushchair.
- The two are linked by a three-kilometre promenade, perfectly suited to an afternoon stroll with the pushchair.
- God forbid if any pushchairs or Zimmer frames attempted to get past us.
- The Evening Press published a letter yesterday from a reader whose pushchair was stolen.
- As Tina Wright folded her pushchair yesterday, she turned around to see the bus drive off down a Colchester street without her.
- It was 1973 or maybe 74 and my sister and I were in our double pushchair, being wheeled along the Embankment in London by our mother, on an anti-Pinochet march, after the coup against Allende.
- The dangerous stretch of road also poses problems for Matthew's sister who has to negotiate the road with a small child and pushchair.
- When I had children, we had to take the baby in our arms and fold the pushchair to get on the bus.
- Has she ever tried to rush through York, manoeuvre a pushchair, or wheel a bike through town during the tourist season?
- The woman, who was pushing a pushchair with a child in it, was seen walking along the pavement of Easthouses Road, just before the junction with Maryburn Road, at around 5pm on the day the teenager was killed.
- Bear in mind however, that not all are wheelchair and pushchair accessible.
- They told one woman pushing a baby in a pushchair that she had an ingenious pouch on wheels.
- If you live a few miles out of town, have a car, do not have young children with pushchairs and other paraphernalia, and do not plan to make bulky purchases, Park and Ride is a very good option.
- The procession included babies in pushchairs, disabled people riding on electric scooters and young children walking.
- Young mothers with pushchairs, disabled people in wheelchairs and, even worse, blind people with guide dogs are all forced on to the highway.
- We wish to point out that we know from practical experience that neither the towpath nor the underpass are suitable for either a wheelchair or pushchair.
- The ferry accommodates cars, bikes, wheelchairs, pushchairs and foot passengers and the crossing takes roughly ten minutes.
- Essentials such as pregnancy testing kits, a cot, pushchair, car seat and even stretch mark cream are then added to the cost.
- Middle-class, first-time parents will man the patrols with a three-wheel pushchair carrying their corn-fed, mop-topped urchins.
- It's not very nice either when people wheel through it with pushchairs and then have to fold them up and put them back in the boot of their cars.
- If anyone reading this knows someone who has recently acquired a lovely new pushchair, which doesn't belong to them, I should be grateful if they would contact the police.
- It was still dark, of course, and our coach was full of elderly nuns and young children in pushchairs, all carrying picnics and giant thermoses of tea.
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