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English

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Etymology

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From car +‎ loading.

Noun

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carloading (plural carloadings)

  1. (rail transport) The loading of a freight car.
    • 1953, United States. Dept. of Agriculture. Production and Marketing Administration, A study of conditions affecting the transportation of grain by railroad:
      From 1940 to 1946, carloadings of grains ranged from about 28 to 35 percent of total shipments of products of agriculture.
    • 1960 November, David Morgan, “"Piggyback"—U.S. success story”, in Trains Illustrated, page 683:
      In 1955, for example, 32 railroads reported 168,150 piggyback carloadings; in 1959 50 roads loaded 415,156 cars; [...]. T.O.F.C. still accounts for little more than 2 per cent of all U.S. carloadings but industry experts expect that percentage to reach between 25 and 50 per cent within the foreseeable future.