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  2. Motorized shopping cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorized_shopping_cart

    While shopping cart theft has also been a costly matter for retailers, the higher cost of the motorized carts makes their theft a greater issue to the store, and thereby leads stores to establish policies prohibiting the carts from exiting stores, even though a disabled person may have the need to bring the cart all the way to their vehicle.

  3. Shopping cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shopping_cart

    A shopping cart held by a woman, containing bags and food. A shopping cart (American English), trolley (British English, Australian English), or buggy (Southern American English, Appalachian English), also known by a variety of other names, is a wheeled cart supplied by a shop or store, especially supermarkets, for use by customers inside the premises for transport of merchandise as they move ...

  4. Amigo Mobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amigo_Mobility

    In 1970, the company introduced their first motorized shopping cart, a variation on their mobility scooter with a built-in basket. [2] The company began selling their mobility scooters in the United Kingdom in 1978 through Raymar, an independent and recently formed company based in the UK. [6] [7]

  5. Category:Shopping carts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Shopping_carts

    Motorized shopping cart; S. Shopping cart conveyor; Shopping cart theory This page was last edited on 19 June 2024, at 10:41 (UTC). Text is available under the ...

  6. Cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cart

    Of the cart types not animal-drawn, perhaps the most common example today is the shopping cart (British English: shopping trolley), which has also come to have a metaphorical meaning in relation to online purchases (here, British English uses the metaphor of the shopping basket). Shopping carts first made their appearance in Oklahoma City in ...

  7. Rickshaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rickshaw

    A rickshaw, or jinrikisha, is a light, two-wheeled cart consisting of a doorless, chairlike body, mounted on springs with a collapsible hood and two shafts. Finished in black lacquer-ware over timber, it was drawn by a single rickshaw runner.

  8. List of land vehicles types by number of wheels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_land_vehicles...

    Electric unicycle [2] Litter wheel; Monowheel [3] Traditional western wheelbarrow. ... Shopping cart; Wheelchair; More than 4. Pentacycle; Six-wheel drive vehicle (6x6)

  9. Why are shopping carts always broken? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/why-shopping-carts-always...

    Rubber wheels have been a mainstay of motorized shopping carts for decades, said Beth Thieme, president and CEO of Amigo Mobility, which produced the first motorized cart in 1968.