v. t. To transport on a truck or trucks. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. i. To exchange commodities; to barter; to trade; to deal. [ 1913 Webster ]
A master of a ship, who deceived them under color of trucking with them. Palfrey. [ 1913 Webster ]
Despotism itself is obliged to truck and huckster. Burke. [ 1913 Webster ]
To truck and higgle for a private good. Emerson. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Cf. F. troc. ]
Garden truck,
Truck farming, raising vegetables for market: market gardening.
v. t.
We will begin by supposing the international trade to be in form, what it always is in reality, an actual trucking of one commodity against another. J. S. Mill. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ L. trochus an iron hoop, Gr. &unr_; a wheel, fr. &unr_; to run. See Trochee, and cf. Truckle, v. i. ]
Goods were conveyed about the town almost exclusively in trucks drawn by dogs. Macaulay. [ 1913 Webster ]
[ 1913 Webster ]
n. The practice of bartering goods; exchange; barter; truck. [ 1913 Webster ]
The truckage of perishing coin. Milton. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. Money paid for the conveyance of goods on a truck; freight. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. One who trucks; a trafficker. [ 1913 Webster ]
No man having ever yet driven a saving bargain with this great trucker for souls. South. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. The business of conveying goods on trucks. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. i. [ From truckle in truckle-bed, in allusion to the fact that the truckle-bed on which the pupil slept was rolled under the large bed of the master. ] To yield or bend obsequiously to the will of another; to submit; to creep. “Small, trucking states.” Burke. [ 1913 Webster ]
Religion itself is forced to truckle to worldly poliey. Norris. [ 1913 Webster ]