0 past simple and past participle of cart --
1 to take something or someone somewhere, especially using a lot of effort: --
informal The drunks who had been sleeping in the park were carted off (= taken by force) to the police station.
informal I've been carting (= carrying) these letters around with me all week, and I still haven't posted them.
Council workers have carted away all the dead leaves that had collected at the side of the road.
We carted all the rubbish to the bottom of the garden and burned it.
I believe it is a fact that the railways of this country have carted something like 8 million tons of dirt through faulty screening.
Every morning and evening, in many rural areas, tens of thousands of seats are being carted round the countryside empty.
We never found out where he carted it off to, but we hope that it was recycled.
The quantity of fish carted varies according to the catch, and has been from 1,100 to 3,000 tons a year.
Under no circumstances may any more plutonium be carted around on our streets or in the air.
He talked of people being humiliated, arrested and carted off.
With regard to carted deer, there is something that has not been pointed out.
I received a letter from a veterinary surgeon who has an interest in carted deer there.