The word automobile comes, via the French automobile, from the Ancient Greek word αὐτός (autós, "self") and the Latin mobilis ("movable"); meaning a vehicle that moves itself, rather than being pulled or pushed by a separate animal or another vehicle. The alternative name car is believed to originate from the Latin word carrus or carrum ("wheeled vehicle"), or the Middle English word carre ("cart") (from Old North French), or karros (a Gallic wagon).[
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Sunday, June 21, 2009
Etymology
The word automobile comes, via the French automobile, from the Ancient Greek word αὐτός (autós, "self") and the Latin mobilis ("movable"); meaning a vehicle that moves itself, rather than being pulled or pushed by a separate animal or another vehicle. The alternative name car is believed to originate from the Latin word carrus or carrum ("wheeled vehicle"), or the Middle English word carre ("cart") (from Old North French), or karros (a Gallic wagon).[
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- Steam power
- The first electric cars
- Exhaust gases are also cleaned up
- Gasoline engines
- Diesel-engined cars
- Fuel and propulsion technologies
- Morris in Europe
- Reflecting the rapid pace
- mass-produced to meet market needs
- Development of automotive technology
- automotive industry
- Ford's complex
- fast-drying Duco
- affordable automobiles
- German engineer Rudolf Diesel
- Veteran Car Club of Great Britain
- Emile Levassor and Armand Peugeot of France
- automobiles Mercedes Benz
- DMG and Benz & Cie
- Daimler-Mercedes
- internal-combustion flat engine
- Benz began promotion
- internal combustion engine
- French inventor
- first internal combustion engine
- Ferdinand Verbiest, a member powered vehicle
- Etymology
- 590 million passenger cars worldwide
- Automobile is far from precise
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