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[ UK /tˈæksɪkˌæb/ ]
[ US /ˈtæksiˌkæb/ ]
NOUN
  1. a car driven by a person whose job is to take passengers where they want to go in exchange for money

How To Use taxicab In A Sentence

  • The view from the back of any taxicab in Greece is a character-building experience.
  • He found himself incapable of work, and at three o'clock, to the surprise of his clerks, who had thought his unexpected visit must mean an important conference of directors, he called a taxicab and started for Westbury. The Perils of Pauline
  • At 11:00 pm, he took a taxicab to return to the Hyatt Hotel.
  • Such legislation presently applies to doctors and dentists, optometrists and pharmacists, barbers and beauticians, and liquor stores and taxicabs, to name a few leading examples.
  • My dearest neighbor I have been riding in taxicabs the livelong day, wad have taken your advice.
  • Fox allowed him to help him on with the coat and followed him outside and down the steps to where a black taxicab waited. CONFESSIONAL
  • The New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission is the agency responsible for licensing and regulating New York City's medallion (yellow) taxicabs, for-hire vehicles (community-based liveries and black cars), commuter vans, paratransit vehicles (ambulettes) and certain luxury limousines.
  • But what if the car was used not for pleasure but purely as a means of transport, like the taxicab?
  • It's easy to get around St. Martin by bus or taxicab - and you should definitely take a tour - but the French side has the more picturesque anchorages.
  • The 19 - year - old's alleged offense: driving an unlicensed taxicab.
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