[
UK
/pˈʊʃtʃeə/
]
NOUN
- a small vehicle with four wheels in which a baby or child is pushed around
How To Use pushchair In A Sentence
- ‘He started running away pushing the pushchair in front of him,’ said Mr Butterworth.
- I feel I am being discriminated against because I am a working mother who doesn't drive so has to travel by bus with a baby in a pushchair during the rush-hour.
- In their wisdom shop bosses decided that I, an elderly person with a shopping trolley, younger disabled people and young mums with pushchairs were not going to be customers.
- They advise against the sales of items that could be faulty and pose a danger risk like the brakes failing on a pushchair.
- It was still dark, of course, and our coach was full of elderly nuns and young children in pushchairs, all carrying picnics and giant thermoses of tea.
- At one point the vehicle drove down a footpath at about 60 mph and narrowly missed a family, along with a baby in a pushchair.
- Most days I remember to weave the pushchair and us along, narrowly avoiding the squelch factor.
- They advise against the sales of items that could be faulty and pose a danger risk like the brakes failing on a pushchair.
- Four out of five men are now involved in picking the pushchair or car seat, according to recent research, where once their input might have been minimal. Times, Sunday Times
- It is virtually impossible to walk two abreast along the pavement and for wheelchairs and pushchairs it is a complete nightmare.