What's the difference between barouche and calash?
Barouche
Definition:
(n.) A four-wheeled carriage, with a falling top, a seat on the outside for the driver, and two double seats on the inside arranged so that the sitters on the front seat face those on the back seat.
Example Sentences:
(1) Barouch said the findings increase optimism that a safe and effective human vaccine against Zika virus might be successful.
(2) We were very surprised and quite impressed that a single shot of either one of these vaccines provided complete protection,” said Barouch.
(3) Dan Barouch, who led the study at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, called the trial results “a step forwards in the development of a Zika virus vaccine”, but said more research lay ahead.
(4) Of the three vaccines tested by Barouch and others, the most conventional and ready for development is a whole, killed Zika virus, which is being pursued by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Maryland.
(5) We don’t want to overstate it, but we hope for protection that is long-lasting,” said Dan Barouch, who co-led the studies at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.
(6) Writing in the journal, Nature , Barouch and colleagues describe how they tested two experimental Zika vaccines in mice.
Calash
Definition:
(n.) A light carriage with low wheels, having a top or hood that can be raised or lowered, seats for inside, a separate seat for the driver, and often a movable front, so that it can be used as either an open or a close carriage.
(n.) In Canada, a two-wheeled, one-seated vehicle, with a calash top, and the driver's seat elevated in front.
(n.) A hood or top of a carriage which can be thrown back at pleasure.
(n.) A hood, formerly worn by ladies, which could be drawn forward or thrown back like the top of a carriage.