Citations:vehicularly challenged

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English citations of vehicularly challenged

Adjective: "(euphemistic) without a vehicle"

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1997 2001 2007 2011
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  • 1997 — Randi Reisfeld, True Blue Hawaii, Simon & Schuster (1997), →ISBN, page 71:
    But if we were surprised to stumble upon the surfers, their reaction at seeing us bordered on shock: five mud-caked, designer-clad, vehicularly challenged Beverly Hills refugees and their teacher, emerging apparition-like from the woods behind them.
  • 2001Cate Tiernan, Awakening, Speak (2001), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    I shot off an e-mail to Hunter, saying I had to cancel tomorrow because I would be vehicularly challenged.
  • 2007 — Matt Boyd, "Enduring Bonds", DieCastX Magazine, Summer 2007:
    His first was "Live and Let Die" in 1973, but given the film's Caribbean setting, automotive escapades are absent, but there are some rather spectacular boat stunts. Moore was not vehincularly challenged for long, though, []
  • 2011 — Lior Jacob Strahilevitz, Information and Exclusion, Yale University Press (2011), →ISBN, page 119:
    People who drive to work every day may also garner substantial benefits from having bus or subway routes nearby, for example, by freeing up scarce freeway space or making it easier for babysitters, housecleaners, or other vehicularly challenged service providers to reach their homes.
  • 2011 — Jeff Stonehill, The Last Great Wild West Show: A Novel of Alaska's Salmon Fishery, Xlibris (2011), →ISBN, page 93:
    "You got a minute to run me out to the Plastic Palace and back? [] It would save a lot of walking."
    "It must suck to be vehicularly challenged as you are," he garbled through a mouth full of powder-covered cake donut.