150.000 used cars in France | Autoscout24, car – Wikionary, the free dictionary

Vow

Autoscout24 is the largest choice of new and used cars in Europe. Discover no less than 42,000 resellers throughout Europe. On Autoscout24, you will have access to a gigantic virtual garage which offers more than 1.5 million vehicle offers, one of them could well become yours. Whether it is a new car or a used car, an ecological city car or a powerful sports vehicle, an electric vehicle The car of your dreams is within clicks Autoscout24, at a low price.

You are looking for a new or used car ?

Make your car dreams with Autoscout24, the largest online car platform in Europe !

Autoscout24 is the largest choice of new and used cars in Europe. Discover no less than 42,000 resellers throughout Europe. On Autoscout24, you will have access to a gigantic virtual garage which offers more than 1.5 million vehicle offers, one of them could well become yours. Whether it is a new car or a used car, an ecological city car or a powerful sports vehicle, an electric vehicle The car of your dreams is within clicks Autoscout24, at a low price.

On our platform, you will find new and used cars that exactly meet your expectations. You will be put directly in contact with the seller or the dealer. You and you alone decide what you find. You can select very specific search criteria such as the price range, the country, the model, the type of fuel, the mileage, the color, the equipment, etc.

For more than 15 years, Autoscout24 has been testing independently of new and used cars and has been transmitting its specific automotive knowledge. With us, you are an explorer because you will regularly discover anecdotes, stories and technical details hiding behind the generic term “car”. Learn more about new cars and collection cars, luxury carts and limousines, sports and utility cars, motorcycles, importers and manufacturers, tuning and additional accessories. Take a look at our magazine, our advice pages, our tuning section as well as on the lexicon dedicated to cars.

You are not only looking for the car of your dreams but also optimal funding and/or appropriate insurance ? Thanks to the various Autoscout24 services, you will find models of individual credits, leasing or car insurance so that you never lose sight of the important details during a purchase.

2 You will find more information on fuel consumption and CO2 emissions from new cars via the Ademe new vehicle comparator.

car

Latin shot (“Action of transport”), derived from vectus (“Past participle of the verb vehere ») [1] . (Around 1200) veiature, In the sense of “means of transport”. The direction of device used for transport dates back to the 13th century, that of automobile at the end of the 19th century .

Common name modify

Singular Plural
car cars
\ vwa.tyʁ \

A car hippomobile. (1) A car (2) Red. A car railway. (3)

car \ vwa.tyʁ \ feminine

  1. Vehicles insisting in a boxes on wheels.
    • On December 9, 1776, over the seven in the evening, a car Quite nice appearance, but in which an attentive observer could recognize a rental coach, crossed the courtyard of the Hôtel des Finances. – (Julie de Querangal, Philippe de Morvelle, Revue des Deux Mondes, volume 2, 4, 1833)
    • He was a man who, like the M. Castries of the century of Louis XVI, did not conceive that one could speak so much about a Alembert or a Diderot, people without car. – (Stendhal, Lucien Leuwen, 1834)
    • The taste for horse riding, formerly so pronounced in France, is today partly lost where everyone prefers to go up in car ; So the saddle horse is almost abandoned. – (Jean Déhès, Essay on the improvement of the horse breeds of France, Imperial Veterinary School of Toulouse, veterinary medicine thesis, 1868)
    • Sometimes when I arrive, I warn that we are sending a car look for me at the station; Often I don’t warn. – (Octave Mirbeau, The hawker, 1886)
    • It is during almost a league an uninterrupted and very curious parade, of cars and pedestrians, good women reporting their petticoats and shaking the rast red earth, bicyclists, people from the mountain, descended in the plain. – (Émile Badel, Ten years of French memory in Lorraine, Nancy: at a. Crépin-Leblond, 1907, page 84)
    • Met Artaud […] who got foot in the wheel of his car, Haded the head in the step, and fell on a straw boot; He would have liked to do it that he would never have done it. – (Jean Giraudoux, Back from Alsace – August 1914, 1916)
  2. ( Especially )Automotive.
    • Damn cars At night, you don’t waste your time there, although you have a good new occasion, you are doing nothing. – (Francis Carco, Hidden images, Albin Michel editions, Paris, 1928)
    • Although he loved the powerful cars of sport, Michel Gallimard was not, as we sometimes hinted, a “crazy about the steering wheel”. He tasted the mechanics and rolled a lot. – (Jérôme Dupuis, The last hours of Albert Camus, L’Express.fr, January 4, 2010)
    • After parking the car Near the station, take the GR®20 that runs along the Agnone. By following the arrow, you will reach the first waterfall after 1 hour of walking. – (Corsican geoguide 2018, Paris, Gallimard Loisirs, 2017)
  3. ( Railway )Element of a passenger transportation, as opposed to the wagon which is used for the goods.
    • I am given a first class ticket, valid to Baku. I go down on the platform which gives access to cars. – (Jules Verne, Claudius Bombarnac, Chapter I, J. Hetzel and C ie, Paris, 1892)
    • The door of the tail sweater, closed to key, opened: superbly, admirably empty, the car offered his impact visitors the most admirable decoration of marquetry in rosewood – lemon jaune and pale carmine – which could imagine. -(Pierre-Jean Remy, Orient-Express, volume 2, Albin Michel, 1984)
    • And, turning his eyes towards the door, he abstained in a sudden and mute reverie. The swing of the car numbed him. – (Francis Carco, The midnight man, Albin Michel editions, Paris, 1938)
  4. (Aged)Burden.
  5. (Aged)Mode of transport.
  6. (Aged)(By metonymy)Quantity that represents the contents of a car.
    • In France, in the department of Puy-de-Dôme, we use crushed bones as fertilizers; In Germany, this practice is more widespread: 10 hectoliters replace 80 cars manure for a hectare. – (The rustic house of the 19th century, 2nd edition, 1854, volume 1, page 95 → Read online) .
Thanks! You've already liked this
No comments