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  1. 28 Σεπ 2017 · freight. (n.) early 15c. "transporting of goods and passengers by water," variant of fraght, which is from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German vracht, vrecht (see fraught). Danish fragt, Swedish frakt apparently also are from Dutch or Frisian.

    • Français (French)

      Signification de freight: fret; Au début du XVe siècle, le...

    • Freightage

      Freight-train is from 1841. -age word-forming element in...

    • Freeway

      Old English freo "exempt from; not in bondage, acting of...

    • Shipping

      shipping (n.)c. 1300, "a ship, means of passing over water;"...

  2. 11 Σεπ 2024 · from Middle Dutch vrachten, vrechten (“ to load (a ship with cargo or passengers); to hire (a ship) for transporting goods, to fraught ”), from vracht, vrecht (noun) (see etymology 1) + -en (suffix forming the infinitive form of verbs).

  3. freight Etymology: Middle English: fraight, from Old French frait, past participle of freiter, from Medieval Latin fretāre, an alteration of Latin vectāre "to carry, transport"

  4. 11 Σεπ 2022 · shipping (n.)c. 1300, "a ship, means of passing over water;" see ship (n.). The meaning "act of sending (freight) by a ship, etc." is from late 15c. As "ships generally or collectively" it is attested from 1590s.

  5. Freight transport, also referred to as freight forwarding, is the physical process of transporting commodities and merchandise goods and cargo. [1] The term shipping originally referred to transport by sea but in American English, it has been extended to

  6. 1. a. : the compensation paid for the transportation of goods. b. : cost. help pay the freight. 2. a. : goods to be shipped : cargo. The freight arrived by steamboat. b. : load, burden. The man staggered under a freight of small logs in a basket. c. : meaning sense 3, significance.

  7. 11 Σεπ 2022 · freight. early 15c. "transporting of goods and passengers by water," variant of fraght, which is from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German vracht, vrecht (see fraught). Danish fragt, Swedish frakt apparently also are from Dutch or Frisian. Also from Low German are Portuguese frete, Spanish f. load.

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