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"caboose for" is not a grammatically correct phrase.
"Caboose" means the rear car of a train, so it would not make sense to use it as part of a sentence without a verb or preposition following it. Some possible correct uses of "caboose" in a sentence are: - The children were excited to ride in the caboose on the scenic train ride. - The train conductor waved from the caboose as the train pulled away from the station. If you were looking to use the word "caboose" in a metaphorical sense, you could say something like, "The poor sales at the end of the quarter were the caboose for the company's disappointing financial year." This means that the poor sales were the final or last part of a series of negative events for the company.
Exact(5)
The caboose, for instance, is the least crowded.
She also lives in the little red caboose for as long as three weeks at a stretch.
The team in Antarctica now will have a particular mindset in order to cope with the low temperatures, and also the cabin fever, which may be an issue if a really bad patch of weather sets in and they are forced to stay inside the caboose for a long amount of time.
He showed off his bar tending skills and then he and Jillian retired to the romantic caboose for dinner.
Page 46: Everyone's favorite body image punching bag Jessica Simpson is back on the weight loss train, aiming to shed her caboose for her upcoming wedding.
Similar(55)
He worked briefly on the rigs; underground, in a coal mine; and, on the railroad, manning freight-train cabooses for the Union Pacific, a job in which he invested particular pride, believing, as he put it, that "the efficient transportation of mail, consumer and capital goods, bulk commodities, etc., is vital to the health and growth of our country".
As they explained it about the town's deterioration, "factories that once made cabooses for trains and commercial trucks have shut down" such that those left are living lives increasingly defined by poverty.
Eventually, cabooses (for a time, "cabeese" was the accepted plural) acquired windowed cupolas, where trainmen could sit and watch the cars ahead to check for dragging gear or smoke from a "hot box," an overheated set of wheel bearings.
Debden, Saskatchewan had a horse and caboose taxi for settlers as early as 1912 providing regular trips to Prince Albert and taking children to school.
I wander into the window-lined caboose, looking for a place to nap, and curl up on a crescent-shaped couch in the tail of the train.
In another flash, I am sitting on an old train caboose, which for some reason is situated in a McDonald's parking lot not far from our house.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com