0 present 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.
The poor chest often paid for the cutting and carting of wood for those who were unable to do this themselves.
The commitment begins with the investment such a volume usually commands and continues through the reading, carting, and full digestion of its contents.
They had got to get a living by carting or coal dealing and the middenstack was worth 30 shillings a year.
Pothier's treatise provides a detailed description of the sort of carting services for which the lessee was responsible.
Smallholders—in my part of the world at any rate—up to that time had an important ancillary occupation in summer—that of carting.
The cutting and carting of grass for silage making is already included under the heading of haymaking.
The average cost of them has been £218, including drainage, water supply, fencing, carting and levelling, and, in some cases, bridge approaches, but excluding architect's fees.
Are these villagers still to go on carting water for miles?