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stagecoach
[steyj-kohch]
noun
a horse-drawn coach that formerly traveled regularly over a fixed route with passengers, parcels, etc.
stagecoach
/ ˈٱɪˌəʊʃ /
noun
a large four-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle formerly used to carry passengers, mail, etc, on a regular route between towns and cities
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of stagecoach1
Example Sentences
There was an overland route from St. Louis and Memphis, Tenn., to San Francisco that required a roughly 22-day journey by horse-drawn stagecoach.
Banners with photos of veterans and dead soldiers peer over sidewalks and legend has it that Jesse James lived here in an age of stagecoaches and outlaws.
Some large plaques also pay tribute to historic events such as the last stagecoach robbery in Kern County in 1869, in which a gunman made off with $1,700 in coinage and gold bullion.
Stumbling upon a stagecoach robbery, she is about to be shot when a tiny light appears and gives her ruffian-bashing, bullet-dodging capabilities.
This Turpin is a butcher’s son who becomes vegan and sort of falls into robbing stagecoaches.
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