Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for cab. Search instead for catb.
Definitions

cab

[kab] / kæb /
NOUN
car for hire
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

See Examples For:

Consider when Gail and Otto arrive in Hollywood and hop in a cab driven by Richard Kind.

From Salon Jul. 12, 2026

He echoed the story he’d told the FBI—that he’d learned of the bombing from someone at his apartment—but then said he’d heard about it during a cab ride.

From Slate Jul. 7, 2026

Mr. Rove’s Nigerian cab driver and mine came from different countries but shared the same conviction.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 6, 2026

"We've had drivers who've gone through formal training, who've got height indicators in the cab, and yet they still hit bridges," he said.

From BBC Jul. 5, 2026

“Packed in like sardines,” Tess says, our knees bumping against one another in the small cab.

From "The Brightwood Code" by Monica Hesse

Refusing to give up, Foster had a board mix put together of the first performance and cabbed it to the radio station.

From The Wall Street Journal Aug. 12, 2015

Their daughter told them she "cabbed it" but they say they do not know how she actually traveled cross-country or where she has been staying.

From Seattle Times Jul. 26, 2013

On Thursday night, I cabbed it to my goddaughter’s house in Fort Greene.

From Slate Nov. 12, 2012

It’s like a slower, 1950s version of the real city across that cool bridge we cabbed over last night.

From "Better Nate Than Ever" by Tim Federle

So, after procuring a Whitaker Almanack, and hunting up the name of one of the most senior, I cabbed to Whitehall.

From Baboo Jabberjee, B.A. by Anstey, F.

The day before E3 officially kicks off this year, I’ll be liveblogging the Ubisoft press conference, then cabbing it over to the L.A.

From Forbes Jun. 2, 2014

Max is a dreamer; a lonely man whose ideal of running a limo service is still unrealised after 12 years of "temporary" cabbing.

From Time Magazine Archive

I won't 'ave it, even if yer are a cabbing passinger.

From Tom Gerrard by Becke, Louis

I was sick of it; and as soon as I could—close upon a year arter, though—I came up to London and took to cabbing, for I’d had quite enough of our old station.”

From Adventures of Working Men From the Notebook of a Working Surgeon by Fenn, George Manville

And then I’ll tell you I’m tired of this cabbing cruise, and I want to get to work again.

From The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson - Swanston Edition Vol. 13 (of 25) by Stevenson, Robert Louis




Vocabulary.com logo
by dictionary.com

Dictionary.com's Learning Companion

Go beyond just looking up words.
Remember them forever with VocabTrainer.

Start training