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  1. Dictionary
    car·go
    /ˈkärɡō/

    noun

    • 1. goods carried on a ship, aircraft, or motor vehicle: "transportation of bulk cargo"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of CARGO is the goods or merchandise conveyed in a ship, airplane, or vehicle : freight. How to use cargo in a sentence.

  3. noun [ C or U ] uk / ˈkɑːɡəʊ / us plural cargoes | cargos. Add to word list. TRANSPORT, COMMERCE. the goods carried by a ship, plane, or other large vehicle: carry/handle/transport a cargo TCL Carriers Ltd was the operator of the vessel on which the cargo was carried.

  4. Cargo refers to goods carried by a large vehicle, like a plane, ship, train, or truck. See a giant truck on the highway piled high with boxes, lumber, or new cars? It's carrying cargo.

  5. CARGO meaning: 1. the goods carried by a ship, aircraft, or other large vehicle: 2. the goods carried by a ship…. Learn more.

  6. Cargo is the load of materials being transported by a vehicle like a ship, airplane, train, or truck, especially for commercial or professional purposes. The word cargo is used collectively —it’s a singular noun that refers to a group of items. For example, all of the shipping containers being transported by a ship are its cargo.

  7. 2 meanings: 1. a. goods carried by a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle; freight b. (as modifier) 2. any load.... Click for more definitions.

  8. noun. /ˈkɑːɡəʊ/ /ˈkɑːrɡəʊ/ [countable, uncountable] (plural cargoes, North American English also cargos) the goods carried in a ship, an aircraft or a motor vehicle. The tanker began to spill its cargo of oil. a cargo ship. Extra Examples. Topics Transport by water c1, Transport by air c1. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin.

  9. cargo meaning, definition, what is cargo: the goods that are being carried in a sh...: Learn more.

  10. noun. goods carried by a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle; freight. ( as modifier ) a cargo vessel. any load. the train pulled in with its cargo of new arrivals. Discover More. Word History and Origins. Origin of cargo 1. 1640–50; from Spanish: “a load,” noun derivative of cargar “to load,” from Late Latin carricāre; charge.

  11. goods that are carried in a vehicle: a cargo of oil. a cargo ship / plane. (Definition of cargo from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

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