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tricycle

[ trahy-si-kuhl, -sik-uhl ]

noun

  1. a vehicle, especially one for children, having one large front wheel and two small rear wheels, propelled by foot pedals.
  2. a velocipede with three wheels propelled by pedals or hand levers.
  3. a three-wheeled motorcycle.


tricycle

/ ˈtraɪsɪkəl /

noun

  1. a three-wheeled cycle, esp one driven by pedals
  2. a three-wheeler for invalids


verb

  1. intr to ride a tricycle

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Derived Forms

  • ˈtricyclist, noun

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Word History and Origins

Origin of tricycle1

From French, dating back to 1820–30; tri-, cycle

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Example Sentences

She once skittered around the sales floor of the Mercury offices on a motorized tricycle, waving to team employees.

From Time

With six modes, from stroller to tricycle, parents can adjust this three-wheeler as a toddler gets older.

Tricycles are typically ridden by athletes who can use their legs but have balance issues that prevent them from using bikes.

A Jewish film festival has backed out of the Tricycle Theater after the venue refused to accept money from the Israeli government.

An overturned tricycle lays feet away as an ominous sky lingers in the background.

On Tuesday a pink tricycle stood in front of a home turned to wreckage.

The filmmakers were shooting their moving target from an adult-size tricycle jury-rigged for the occasion.

The next feature in the programme was that a tiger should ride round the circus on a tricycle.

At that moment an errand-boy was slowly propelling a carrier tricycle along by the kerb.

Bolée's tandem tricycle was the sensation during the first stage, averaging twenty miles an hour.

They went through, and he was lucky enough to locate a broken-down tricycle cab.

Anyhow, he got on his tricycle, and started for a ride into the country.

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tricyanic acidtricyclic