Definition of FREIGHT

freight

Plural: freights

Noun

  • goods carried by a large vehicle
  • transporting goods commercially at rates cheaper than express rates
  • the charge for transporting something by common carrier
    • "we pay the freight"
    • "the freight rate is usually cheaper"
  • The transportation of goods (originally by water; now also (chiefly US) by land); also, the hiring of a vehicle or vessel for such transportation.
  • Goods or items in transport; cargo, luggage.
  • Payment for transportation.
  • A burden, a load.
  • Cultural or emotional associations.
  • Ellipsis of freight train.

Verb

Verb Forms: freighted, freighting, freights

  • To load with goods for transport, or to transport goods.
  • transport commercially as cargo
  • load with goods for transportation
  • To load (a vehicle or vessel) with freight (cargo); also, to hire or rent out (a vehicle or vessel) to carry cargo or passengers.
  • To transport (goods).
  • To load or store (goods, etc.).
  • To carry (something) as if it is a burden or load.
  • Chiefly followed by up: to carry as part of a cargo.

Adj

  • Freighted; laden.

Examples

  • His hand was freighted with vowels, making a good play difficult in Words With Friends.
  • The freight shifted and the trailer turned over on the highway.
  • The freight was more expensive for cars than for coal.
  • They shipped it ordinary freight to spare the expense.

Origin / Etymology

From Late Middle English freight, freght, freyght [and other forms], a variant of fraught, fraght (“transport of goods or people, usually by water; transportation fee; transportation facilities; cargo or passengers of a ship; (figuratively) burden; ballast of a ship; goods; a charge”), from Middle Dutch vracht, vrecht, and Middle Low German vrecht (“cargo, freight; transportation fee”), from Old Saxon frāht, frēht, from Proto-West Germanic *fra- (from Proto-Germanic *fra- (prefix meaning ‘completely, fully’)) + *aihti (from Proto-Germanic *aihtiz (“possessions, property”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eyḱ- (“to come into possession of, obtain; to own, possess”)).
The English word can be analysed as for- + aught, and is a doublet of fraught.
Cognates
* French fret (“cargo, freight; transportation fees; rental of a ship”)
* Old English ǣht (“livestock; possession, property; power”)
* Old High German frēht (“earnings”)
* Portuguese frete (“cargo, freight; transportation fees”)
* Spanish flete (“cargo, freight; charter (hire of a vehicle for transporting cargo)”)
* Swedish frakt c (“cargo, freight; transportation fees”)

Synonyms

cargo, consignment, freight rate, freightage, lading, load, loading, payload, shipment

Scrabble Score: 14

freight: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Word
freight: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
freight: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary

Words With Friends Score: 14

freight: valid Words With Friends Word