internal combustion engined

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From internal combustion engine +‎ -ed.

Adjective edit

internal combustion engined (not comparable)

  1. Having an internal combustion engine.
    • 1913, Internal Combustion Engineering, volume III, page 31:
      The development of the motor omnibus has so greatly influenced that of the heavier types of internal combustion engined vehicles that, properly to appreciate the tendencies of the last year, one must go back to August, 1909, when the Chief Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police issued a new regulation limiting the weight of motor omnibuses to be licensed from that time onwards to 3 tons inclusive of body.
    • 1932, Geo. W. McVay, “[To] Hon. H. W. Johnson”, in Hearing Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Commerce, United States Senate, Seventy-Second Congress, First Session on S. 2295, a Bill for the Inspection of Vessels Propelled by Internal-Combustion Engines, Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, page 3:
      Internal combustion engined vessels of small tonnage which are employed as oil carriers and for harbor and bay towing, etc., are increasing on our inland waters at an alarming rate and in most instances these vessels are piloted by inexperienced men.
    • 2015, Jack Erjavec, Rob Thompson, Automotive Technology: A Systems Approach, 6th edition, Cengage Learning, →ISBN, page 820:
      Ford and Mazda have also developed internal combustion engined vehicles with hydrogen power.