0 past simple and past participle of cart
1 to take something or someone somewhere, especially using a lot of effort:
We carted all the rubbish to the bottom of the garden and burned it.
Council workers have carted away all the dead leaves that had collected at the side of the road.
informal I've been carting (= carrying) these letters around with me all week, and I still haven't posted them.
informal The drunks who had been sleeping in the park were carted off (= taken by force) to the police station.
In simplest form, commodities appear in any market as distinct, packaged products, able to be displayed, priced, and carted off by the buyer.
By reducing the distance which the refuse had to be carted, transportation costs could be cut.
Sheaves were stooked on the plot then carted and stored until threshing in winter, when bushel weight was determined by weighing a bushel measure filled with grain.
Occupational networks extended away from the coal-face, via the boys who carted the coal to the bottom of the shaft, and up to the pit mouth.
They can he fabricated and carted through the countryside to remote places.
The carted deer lives in a paddock alongside the hounds.
This coal has not the necessary steam-heating qualities, and it has to be cleaned out of the boilers and carted away to be dumped.
I received a letter from a veterinary surgeon who has an interest in carted deer there.