[
US
/ˈhætʃˌbæk/
]
[ UK /hˈætʃbæk/ ]
[ UK /hˈætʃbæk/ ]
NOUN
- a car having a hatchback door
- a sloping rear car door that is lifted to open
How To Use hatchback In A Sentence
- Why aren't more different types of cars - namely hatchbacks, wagons and microcars - more readily available in the U.S.?
- It's more spacious in the back, particularly in the boot, its extended roofline giving it the look of a small estate rather than a hatchback.
- Also avoid putting it unsecured in the boot of a hatchback or estate car, as the carrier will be thrown around in a crash.
- RS means turning a normal family hatchback into a rather abnormal car with the performance of a supercar and the handling of a rally car. The Sun
- Popular family hatchbacks are also hitting higher prices. The Sun
- Sporty hatchbacks, coupes and saloons would be tearfully exchanged for the bigger, sensible and practical but dull to drive estates.
- The design is ageing and the interior plasticky, but this is the most fun and rewarding to drive of all these small, sporty hatchbacks.
- When the police came they loaded a silver hatchback car from outside the flat on to a lorry and drove it away. The Sun
- To make a hot hatchback appeal these days, it must have more power than all its rivals. Times, Sunday Times
- It is expected to sell well in Ireland, where, unusually in Europe, saloons outsell hatchbacks in the small car segment.