LOAD vs FREIGHT: NOUN
- A heavy or overweight person.
- Genetic load.
- Weight to be borne or conveyed
- The power output of a generator or power plant
- An amount of alcohol sufficient to intoxicate
- A quantity that can be processed or transported at one time
- An onerous or difficult concern
- A deposit of valuable ore occurring within definite boundaries separating it from surrounding rocks
- The front part of a guided missile or rocket or torpedo that carries the nuclear or explosive charge or the chemical or biological agents
- Goods carried by a large vehicle
- A weight or mass that is supported.
- The overall force to which a structure is subjected in supporting a weight or mass or in resisting externally applied forces.
- A responsibility regarded as oppressive.
- The quantity that is or can be carried at one time.
- The share of work allocated to or required of a person, machine, group, or organization.
- The demand for services or performance made on a machine or system.
- The amount of material that can be inserted into a device or machine at one time.
- A single charge of ammunition for a firearm.
- An ejaculation of semen.
- A mental weight or burden.
- The external mechanical resistance against which a machine acts.
- A device or the resistance of a device to which power is delivered.
- A fee that a mutual fund charges to an investor when the investor purchases or redeems shares in the fund.
- A great number or amount.
- Something that is carried, as by a vehicle, person, or animal.
- See lode.
- Electrical device to which electrical power is delivered
- That which is carried; a burden laid on or placed in anything, or taken up, for conveyance; specifically, a suitable or customary burden; the amount or quantity that can be or usually is carried: as, a ship's load; a cart-load; wood and hay are often sold by the load.
- That which is upborne or sustained; a burden; a weight resting on or in anything: as, a load of fruit on a tree; a load of learning in the mind.
- Especially—3. That which is hard to be sustained or endured; an oppressive or grievous burden: as, a load of debt; a load of guilt.
- Transport of goods.
- Goods or items in transport.
- Payment for transportation.
- Freight transportation, or freight line.
- The price paid a common carrier for the carriage of goods.
- The sum paid by a party hiring a ship or part of a ship for the use of what is thus hired.
- That with which anything is fraught or laden for transportation; lading; cargo, especially of a ship, or a car on a railroad, etc.
- Short for freight-train.
- In a more general sense, the price paid for the use of a ship, including the transportation of passengers.
- The price paid for the transportation of goods or merchandise by sea; by extension, in the United States and Canada, in general, the price paid for the transportation of goods or merchandise by land or by sea.
- The cargo, or any part of the cargo, of a ship; lading; that which is carried by water; in the United States and Canada, in general, anything carried for pay either by water or by land; the lading of a ship, canal-boat, railroad-car, wagon, etc.
- A railway train carrying goods only.
- The charge for transporting goods.
- Commercial transportation of goods.
- A burden; a load.
- Goods carried by a vessel or vehicle, especially by a commercial carrier; cargo.
- Goods carried by a large vehicle
- The charge for transporting something by common carrier
- Transporting goods commercially at rates cheaper than express rates
LOAD vs FREIGHT: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Employed in the transportation of freight; having to do with freight.
- A railroad train made up of freight cars; -- called in England goods train.
- See under Car.
- A person employed by a transportation company to receive, forward, or deliver goods.
LOAD vs FREIGHT: VERB
- Fill or place a load on
- Provide with munition
- Put (something) on a structure or conveyance
- To transport (goods).
- Load with goods for transportation
- Transport commercially as cargo
- To load with freight.
LOAD vs FREIGHT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To give worries or difficulties to; weigh down; burden.
- To provide or fill nearly to overflowing; heap.
- To charge with additional meanings, implications, or emotional import.
- To put (something) into or onto a structure or conveyance.
- To insert (a necessary material) into a device.
- To make (dice) heavier on one side by adding weight.
- To put or place a load into or onto a structure, device, or conveyance.
- To charge a firearm with ammunition.
- To receive a load.
- To transfer (data) from a storage device into a computer's memory.
- To have or put runners on (first, second, and third base).
- To increase (an insurance premium or mutual fund share price) by adding expenses or sale costs.
- To raise the power demand in (an electrical circuit), as by adding resistance.
- N/A
LOAD vs FREIGHT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To convey commercially as cargo.
- To load with goods to be transported.
- To load with goods, as a ship, or vehicle of any kind, for transporting them from one place to another; to furnish with freight
LOAD vs FREIGHT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Corrupt, debase, or make impure by adding a foreign or inferior substance; often by replacing valuable ingredients with inferior ones
- Transfer from a storage device to a computer's memory
- Provide (a device) with something necessary
- To add to (the net amount of the premium fixed as the actual cost of issuing a policy of insurance) such an amount as will cover the office expense of carrying the policy.
- (idiom) (take a load off) To sit or lie down.
- (idiom) (get a load of) To listen to.
- (idiom) (get a load of) To look at; notice.
- (idiom) (have a load on) To be intoxicated.
- Same as fraught.
- To hire for the transportation of goods or merchandise.
- To load or lade with goods or merchandise for transportation: often used figuratively.
- To carry or transport as freight.
LOAD vs FREIGHT: RELATED WORDS
- Lode, Warhead, Lade, Encumbrance, Consignment, Lading, Onus, Charge, Shipment, Freight, Stow, Cargo, Laden, Payload, Burden
- Rail, Tonnage, Forwarder, Shipping, Haulage, Trucking, Freightage, Freight rate, Payload, Load, Consignment, Loading, Shipment, Lading, Cargo
LOAD vs FREIGHT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Unladen, Workload, Incumbrance, Warhead, Lade, Consignment, Onus, Charge, Shipment, Freight, Stow, Cargo, Laden, Payload, Burden
- Container, Transit, Railway, Transport, Transportation, Rail, Forwarder, Shipping, Haulage, Trucking, Payload, Load, Consignment, Shipment, Cargo
LOAD vs FREIGHT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Bandwidth Control, Load Balancing, Routing, VLAN, Firewall, VPN, Tunneling and Load balancing, OSPF.
- You may see that requests continue to load in long after the Page Load timing milestone has occurred.
- Sterilized items shall have a load control identiused, the cycle or load number, Preparation for sterilization.
- Dead load and live load both produce torsion in horizontally curved girders.
- LOAD DATA to load externally created Parquet files into the table.
- Load my Minified JS after the page load.
- Load the ajax div seconds later after page load.
- The maximum value of V often results from the combination of dead load, five load, and half wind load acting on the leeward side.
- With the same line and load, the pilot will demonstrate load control and placement by flying the load through a predetermined ground course.
- Unbonded Girder load Working Cracking load load Ultimate load Load on beam Fig.
- Contingent Cargo Coverage for Freight Brokers and Freight Forwarders, High Limits available.
- Freight forwarders often specialize in consolidating LTL freight from multiple shippers.
- Improve freight project prioritization processes for all modes of freight.
- Freight payable at destination, also referred to as freight forward.
- Freight Packaging Tips Freight comes in all shapes and sizes.
- Coordinate the delivery of freight to the dock; unload and prepare the freight for transport to Beaver Island; adequately identify and package freight items.
- The end result is that there is a growth in total freight vehicles and average distances traveled to support freight intermodal freight movement.
- China to Canada, you can choose from one of four modes: FCL sea freight, LCL sea freight, air freight, or express.
- Freight rates, especially FCL sea freight and air freight rates, are affected by seasonal factors.
- Army, Transportation Branch, concerning railroad freight rates, freight weight requirements, and movements of freight trains.
LOAD vs FREIGHT: QUESTIONS
- How are load cells different from analog load cells?
- What is the Inno kayak lifter load assist load assist-clamp?
- Does working up a load recipe lead to a highly accurate load?
- How to give-a-load and share a load on Sun Cellular?
- How do I determine if a wall is load-bearing or non-load-bearing?
- Do I need to disconnect load cells from multi-load cell systems?
- What is the load standard for short-open-load-through calibration?
- How do we act as an abnormal load/oversize load agent?
- What is the default load true and load false for RMAN?
- What is radial load and axial load in ball bearing?
- Is air freight the most expensive freight solution?
- How do I record freight charges for supplier freight?
- What questions should I ask freight freight payment data?
- Where does freight freight lines operate in Western Australia?
- Why choose freight freight forwarder Gothenburg Geodis Sweden AB?
- What types of freight qualify for Doss freight assistance?
- What makes Delta freight different from other freight companies?
- Can I arrange international freight without a freight forwarder?
- Is FCL freight better than LCL freight for pallets?
- How to calculate freight charges or freight rates guide?