Explore a collection of the most beloved and motivational quotes and sayings about Cart. Share these powerful messages with your loved ones on social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, or on your personal blog, and inspire the world with their wisdom. We've compiled the Top 100 Cart Quotes and Sayings from 98 influential authors, including Richard Hayne,John Flanagan,Frances Beinecke,Elisabeth Austin,Thiruvalluvar, for you to enjoy and share.

We must permeate the stores with creativity and offer service when and to the degree the customer wants it. Of course, it means offering all the omni bells and whistles they want, like in-store pickup, same-day delivery, and mobile point of sale, and all of this must be done every hour of every day the store is open. By Richard Hayne Permeate Creativity Offer Service Degree

It's a walking cart," Horace told him. "You get under it, so the spears won't hit you, and go for a walk. By John Flanagan Horace Cart Walking Told Walk

When we go to the store, we bring home more than food - we bring home traces of broader environmental problems. But we can use our shopping carts and dinner plates to help solve some of those problems. By Frances Beinecke Bring Home Problems Store Food

When you get something from a ship its called CARgo. if you get something from a car its called SHIPment By Elisabeth Austin Cargo Called Ship Shipment Car

There is a limit for everything. You can't just load tons and tons of peacock feathers in a cart considering it's light weight. If you do, it will damage the axle of the cart. By Thiruvalluvar Limit Tons Cart Weight Load

I distracted Herbert by pretending to trip and break a bone. Ethan darted around to the red golf cart with a cocky smile on his face. He put the key in ignition, and the vehicle roared to life. "Hey," Herbert shouted, snapping his attention to Ethan. I sprang up and ran up to Ethan. He pulled me in the cart and stomped on the gas pedal. We shot through the automatic doors with Herbert on our tail. "Go faster!" I cheered. My brother smacked the steering wheel. "I can't; it's a golf cart. By Erica Sehyun Song Herbert Ethan Bone Cart Distracted

I asked a shop owner if he could help me out. He said: "What way did you come in?" By Frank Carson Asked Shop Owner

marketplace, he had already seen it when it was By Paulo Coelho Marketplace

As we make our way around the supermarket, I load in the essentials and Jesse loads in a dozen jars of peanut butter, a few jars of chocolate spread and a several cans of squirty cream. By Jodi Ellen Malpas Jars Jesse Supermarket Butter Cream

Nicholas wrestled a grocery cart free from the queue and pushed it into the produce section at Publix. "They make really good subs here," I said. By Ann Kidd Taylor Publix Nicholas Wrestled Grocery Cart

I've got to have wheels," Theo called after him, and swore under his breath as he heard his fatherwalk down the stairs. "You might as well be dead out here without wheels." He flopped back on thebed to brood up at the ceiling.Maddy just shook her head. "You're such a moron, Theo.""You're so ugly, Maddy.""You're never going to get a car if you nag him. If I help you get a car, you have to drive me to themall twelve times, without being mean about it.""How are you going to help me get a car, you little geek?" But he was already considering. Shealmost always got what she wanted.She sauntered into the room, made herself at home. "First the deal. Then we discuss By Nora Roberts Theo Wheels Car Stairs Called

If the store were your own business, you'd escort the customer to a product's location in the store and refer to the customer by name. By Steven Burd Store Customer Business Escort Product

Every week, I heave open a supermarket skip and find therein a more exotic shopping list of items than I could possibly have invented - Belgian chocolates, ripe bananas, almond croissants, stone-ground raisin bread - often so much it would have fed a hundred people. By Tristram Stuart Belgian Week Invented Chocolates Ripe

Precision Shipping." Shahara read the logo off the side of the station. "Nice name." "Thanks. Our motto is 'Be happy with our service or we'll kill you'."- Shahara & Syn By Sherrilyn Kenyon Shipping Precision Shahara Syn Nice

One, two, three ... let's go shopping! By Thomas S. Monson Shopping

Did you learn to drive - by playing Mario Kart - ""I've never put a Mario in a cart and I never will. By Eva Morgan Kart Mario Drive Learn Playing

That books, a commodity little changed since Caxton's day, should have turned out to be the trailblazers of retailing on the internet is one of the stranger cultural ironies of our time. If you've bought one thing on the net, the newest and most prodigiously high-tech communications system imaginable, then it is almost certain to be a book, the oldest and simplest. By Bryan Appleyard Caxton Day Time Commodity Changed

This was a brainchild of mine, to build a shop where you could walk up to everything and didn't feel like you had to keep your hands off. I wanted a shop that you could walk into and feel comfortable in, and I wanted women to feel comfortable in the shop as well. By Roger Meddows Taylor Shop Feel Walk Mine Comfortable

The skopets1 who sits in the shop rents the floor above. By Fyodor Dostoyevsky Sits Shop Rents Floor

It seemed to me that Babette and I, in the mass and variety of our purchases, in the sheer plenitude those crowded bags suggested, the weight and size and number, the familiar package designs and vivid lettering, the giant sizes, the family bargain packs with Day-Glo sale stickers, in the sense of replenishment we felt, the sense of well-being, the security and contentment these products brought to some snug home in our souls - it seemed we had achieved a fullness of being that is not known to people who need less, expect less, who plan their lives around lonely walks in the evening. By Don Delillo Sense Babette Purchases Suggested Number

I quickly realized that shopping on Amazon had made the idea of parking my car and going into a store feel like an outrageous imposition on my time and good nature. By Maria Semple Amazon Nature Quickly Realized Shopping

Shopping's absolutely impossible nowadays. You can't get near the counter, and when you do, they haven't got it and you pay twiceas much for it. By Arthur Wimperis Shopping Nowadays Absolutely Impossible Counter

Then, a historic event changed everything for my family: Henry Ford created the Model T. Others soon followed suit, inventing their own automobiles. The people who had been buying and renting carts started buying trucks or small cars instead. Despite my family's expertise in their craft, nobody wanted a car with wooden wheels. Very quickly, within the space of 10 years, their business started to collapse. By Simon Dudley Henry Ford Model Suit Inventing

Where was the "exit" sign? Why did they make it so difficult to get out of shopping center parking lots? You'd done your shopping - they weren't going to get any more money out of you. What was their objective here? By Liane Moriarty Exit Sign Shopping Lots Make

I carry groceries home on the tank of my motorcycle. By Stephan Jenkins Motorcycle Carry Groceries Home Tank

She pulled up to the garage in front of Nordstrom (no matter where she was going in the mall, she liked to enter through Nordstrom) By Beth Harbison Nordstrom Mall Pulled Garage Front

locomotive, Special trucks By David Mccullough Locomotive Special Trucks

I walked inside Macy's and faced the pathetic spectacle of a department store full of shoppers, none of whom were shopping for themselves. Without the instant gratification of a self-aimed purchase, everyone walked around in the tactical stupor of the financially obligated. By Rachel Cohn Macy Shoppers Walked Inside Faced

At the sales counter, the human race's greatest confrontation with existence, there were no yesterdays, no history to be relived, only an intense transactional present. By J.g. Ballard Counter Existence Yesterdays Relived Present

People are always going to go shopping. A lot of our effort is just: 'How do we make the retail experience a great one?' By Philip Green People Shopping Lot Effort Make

And so really, you have given me no choice but to take you shopping byforce." She sighed, then reached up, dropping her sunglasses down fromtheir perch on her head to cover her eyes. "Do you even realize how happythe average teenage girl would be in your shoes? I have a credit card. We'reat the mall. I want to buy you things. It's like adolescent nirvana."- Cora By Sarah Dessen Byforce Choice Shopping Cora Sighed

In the background she can hear the shopping carts performing their clashy, anal copulations. By Neal Stephenson Clashy Anal Copulations Background Hear

Tonight, darling, we are going to right a lot of wrongs. And we are going to wrong some rights. The first shall be last; the last shall be first; the meek shall do some earth-inheriting. But before we can radically reshape the world, we need to shop. By John Green Tonight Darling Lot Wrongs Wrong

Oh, a Container Store," I gush upon seeing the organizational store. "Does that get you all hot and bothered, Chloe? Did you want to stop?" "Shut up," I say as we cross the street. "Maybe later. By Jana Aston Store Container Chloe Gush Organizational

Most of the rest of the crowd was lined up in front of food carts selling kebabs, pizza cupcakes, and ice cream churros. By David Wong Kebabs Pizza Cupcakes Churros Rest

She looked around. They had drifted far away from the bank of the canal. "Are we stealing this boat?" "Stealing' is such an ugly word," he mused. "What do you want to call it?" He picked her up and swung her around before putting her down. "An extreme case of window-shopping. By Cassandra Clare Looked Stealing Canal Boat Drifted

Toys to deftly pluck up like animal crackers and deposit safely into a crate decorated with friezes of bright circus trains carrying aardvarks, dodos, swift dromedaries, baby elephants, and plastic dinosaurs. A box of mixed metaphors. By Patti Smith Dodos Toys Aardvarks Swift Dromedaries

Your everyday supermarket now carries roughly 40,000 items - twice as many as a decade ago. There are so many products, so many brands and sub-species of those brands, that no consumer is safe from the bombardment of choice overload.A huge variety of product offering doesn't aid consumers. It is insanity. From the vast array of athletic shoes to bagels to portable CD players to bottled water, there quickly becomes a point at which mega-choices, like mega-information, do not serve the consumer; they abuse him. By Jeff Davidson Items Roughly Ago Everyday Supermarket

Simon shook his head."Look,do you know what you want to eat,or do you just want me to keep pushing this cart up and down aisles because it amuses you?""That and I'm not really familiar with what they sell in mundane grocery stores.Maryse usually cooks or we order in food."said Jace By Cassandra Clare Lookdo Jace Simon Head Food

Every day after work, my mom and I go shopping. My dad is about to kill me. I say, We need it, daddy! By Miley Cyrus Work Shopping Day Mom Daddy

And for all of you at home, you are all welcome to visit my store. You are also welcome to park off you motherparking parks, and go park yourself. But remember, don't park in a handicapped spot. By Carlos Mencia Home Store Park Visit Motherparking

u know when u are in a garage filled with cars (girls) and then u click on the clicker and cara opens up By Kirill Girls Cars Garage Filled Click

Amazon is a marvelous conglomeration and delivery system for products of every imaginable function. But the book 'business' is really not the same as the sale of lawn rakes or adapters for telephones. By Janet Fitch Amazon Function Marvelous Conglomeration Delivery

A store is a portrait of its owner. By Chip Averwater Owner Store Portrait

Do you know if there's a supermarket in this mall?" The voice is young. And white. Morris discovers he can breathe again. "Safeway," he says, without turning. He has no idea if there's a supermarket in the mall or not. "Oh. Okay. Thanks. By Stephen King Supermarket Safeway Mall Young White

Hey, I can shop. You hunt down your purchase, club it to death with a credit card and drag it out of the store, right? By Dana Marie Bell Hey Shop Purchase Club Store

I still don't know why we didn't hire a carto get around Ireland.""When I was a kid, I always dreamed about living in Ireland. I used to pretend I was one ofthe traveling people, driving my gypsy wagon from village to village. Used to picture a darkgypsy kidnapping me and having his way with me. Exciting stuff." Katy grinned at her. "Couldstill happen, you know.""Katy, we have a horse that's so laid-back I have to keep checking to see if he's dead. By Nina Bangs Ireland Ireland Kid Hire Carto

Then came the gadgeteer, otherwise known as the sporting-goods dealer. He has draped the American outdoorsman with an infinity of contraptions, all offered as aids to self-reliance, hardihood, woodcraft, or marksmanship, but too often functioning as substitutes for them. Gadgets fill the pockets, they dangle from neck and belt. The overflow fills the auto-trunk and also the trailer. Each item of outdoor equipment grows lighter and often better, but the aggregate poundage becomes tonnage. By Aldo Leopold Gadgeteer Dealer Sportinggoods American Hardihood

An elevator. The doors of the elevator were gone, as were the cab and the lift mechanism, sold for reuse or for scrap. By Dean Koontz Elevator Mechanism Sold Scrap Doors

If you wanted to buy anything from Ligor, you'd lower a basket from your floor and then shout By Orhan Pamuk Ligor Shout Wanted Buy Lower

I come here for supplies.The cashier doesn't notice things.Great.She just admitted she's a shoplifter. By Brodi Ashton Notice Shoplifter Suppliesthe Cashier Admitted

My mother likes to say that I was conceived to shop - not just born to shop. My whole life as a child was following her and her sister and friends around on her shopping trips. By Kevin Kwan Shop Mother Conceived Born Trips

When I was a kid, I went to the store and asked the guy, Do you have any toy train schedules? By Steven Wright Kid Guy Schedules Store Asked

Shopping is really complicated if you are a girl. By Helen Salter Shopping Girl Complicated

Floor: the world's biggest shelf. By Frankie Rose Floor Shelf World Biggest

trolley with Jenny's body on it was wheeled past us, surrounded By Rosamund Lupton Surrounded Jenny Trolley Body Wheeled

He turned them into real-life versions of an M. C. Escher drawing, automating them to the rafters, with blinking lights on aisles and shelves to guide human workers to the right products, and conveyor belts that ran into and out of massive machines, called Crisplants, that took products from the conveyors and scanned and sorted them into customer orders to be packaged and shipped. These facilities, Wright decreed, would be called not warehouses but distribution centers, as they were in Walmart's internal lexicon. By Brad Stone Turned Reallife Versions Crisplants Products

He eyed her cart with wry amusement. You either have a lot of very little flashlights, or a busy vibrator. By Jill Shalvis Amusement Eyed Cart Wry Flashlights

What are we doing?" Simon asked as they followed the cart across the castle's bailey and into London. "We're following yon wagon," Sin answered. "Why?" "Because it is in front of us." "Well, that certainly answers that. 'Twould be difficult to follow the cart if it were behind us."-Simon & Sin By Kinley Macgregor Sin Simon London Cart Twould

The new building housing the store. The By Kristen Proby Store Building Housing

There's times when I just have to quit thinking ... and the only way I can quit thinking is by shopping. By Tammy Faye Bakker Quit Thinking Shopping Times

In today's retail environment, competition comes from every conceivable retail format. To succeed, we have to operate more efficiently and compete more effectively against players at all levels of the retail demographic. There is no question that this is a bold and exciting move, and one I believe will have a positive impact on competitive retailing for American consumers in the longer term. By Bill Vaughan Environment Competition Format Retail Today

You've got bad eating habits if you use a grocery cart in 7-Eleven. By Dennis Miller Bad Eating Habits Grocery Cart

Grocery Outlet - 3446 Highland Ave, (619) 420-7134 By Shawn Mayo 4207134 Outlet Highland Ave Grocery

sweeping out of shops, and the By Charles Dickens Sweeping Shops

The first supermarket supposedly appeared on the American landscape in 1946. That is not very long ago. Until then, where was all the food? Dear folks, the food was in homes, gardens, local fields, and forests. It was near kitchens, near tables, near bedsides. It was in the pantry, the cellar, the backyard. By Joel Salatin American Supermarket Supposedly Appeared Landscape

Recreational shopping is the shortest distance between two points: you and broke. By Victoria Moran Recreational Points Broke Shopping Shortest

Stroll on. When the going gets tough, the postmodern analyst goes shopping. By Chris Jenks Stroll Tough Shopping Postmodern Analyst

truck. He backed By Mark T. Sullivan Truck Backed

ship. The courier just arrived from Paidara. By Michael Gruber Ship Paidara Courier Arrived

your second-hand bicycles in the alleyways By John Altman Alleyways Secondhand Bicycles

You can walk through the grocery store and, while the brightly colored packaging and empty promises are still mesmerizing, you can see the products for what they are. By Michael Moss Mesmerizing Walk Grocery Store Brightly

I buy things through the ShopStyle app on my phone, then have them delivered to a neighbour so Oliver doesn't see them arrive. When he's out, I collect them, cut off the labels, and bury them deep in the recycling box under the wine bottles. By Helen George Oliver Phone Arrive Buy Things

Buy, buy, says the sign in the shop window; Why, why, says the junk in the yard. By Paul Mccartney Buy Window Yard Sign Shop

And more'?"The name of the store is Dolls and More. He's asking what others have before him once they come into the store and only see dolls. I nod. "Dolls and more dolls. By Kasie West Dolls Store Nod

The joy of being a consumer is that it doesn't require thought, responsibility, self-awareness or shame: All you have to do is obey the first urge that gurgles up from your stomach. And then obey the next. And the next. And the next. By Matt Taibbi Responsibility Obey Thought Selfawareness Shame

He has an idea. For wood. Or Styron does. Something about boxcars." "Boxcars?" "A mess of them at the old yard." "That's good news. That's real good news." He smiled, and she braced herself for the three words that she knew would follow. "The Lord provides," he said. She felt By Rae Meadows Idea Boxcars Good Styron Wood

Most shoppers don't buy everything they need at one store. By Charles Duhigg Store Shoppers Buy

Bargain ... anything a customer thinks a store is losing money on. By Kin Hubbard Bargain Customer Store Losing Money

Bicycles, bullock carts, and buses that belched thick, black smoke moved in anarchic streams with the auto rickshaws and cars along the streets. Many of the shops - normally selling everything from groceries to stainless steel cookware to shoes - stood silent behind shutters and honeycomb grilles. By Ken Doyle Bicycles Bullock Carts Thick Black

on the Internet, shelf space is infinite, By John Seabrook Internet Shelf Infinite Space

I didn't shop. I committed retaliatory consumerism. By Kresley Cole Shop Consumerism Committed Retaliatory

I am not a retailer - I have never run a store; I have never understood the full details of how you can make a consumer satisfied. To build a company, to do deals, to motivate people: this is what I am able to do. By Stefano Pessina Retailer Store Satisfied Run Understood

Oversized retail operations of the sort that are called "outlets" (as if they were sewer drains rather than shopping locations). By Stephen King Outlets Oversized Called Locations Retail

The mystical nature of American consumption accounts for its joylessness. We spend a great deal of time in stores, but if we don't seem to take much pleasure in our buying, it's because we're engaged in the acts of sacrifice and self-definition. Abashed in the presence of expensive merchandise, we recognize ourselves ... as suppliants admitted to a shrine. By Lewis H. Lapham American Joylessness Mystical Nature Consumption

The online shopping paradigm is finally changing. Indeed, I think we've seen more innovation in the last 10 months than in the last 10 years. We've seen an explosion of interesting technologies and opportunities that seek to change online shopping. By Josh Kopelman Changing Online Shopping Paradigm Finally

The shelves of this store are stacked with stock. You will find a steamship, a sailing ship, and even a spaceship. There are several sorts of shoe and scores of signs and symbols. There is a sketch of a squinch, a selection of shells (not all from the sea), a siamang settled on a seat, a sponge to be studied, and sundry stuff suspended from strings. In all I included 1,234 Ss for you to see. By Mike Wilks Stock Shelves Store Stacked Steamship

Shopping malls are liquid TVs for the end of the twentieth century. A whole micro-circuitry of desire, ideology and expenditure for processed bodies drifting through the cyber-space of ultracapitalism. By Arthur Kroker Shopping Century Malls Liquid Tvs

On the one hand, shopping is dependable: You can do it alone, if you lose your heart to something that is wrong for you, you can return it; it's instant gratification and yet something you buy may well last for years. By Judith Krantz Hand Shopping Dependable Years Lose

When you had a set of wheels that could take you anywhere, you didn't walk away from it. By Joe Hill Set Wheels Walk

At the Automatica robot and automation fair in Munich this week the organisers devoted a whole section to so-called "service robots". Scientists at the Fraunhofer Institute for manufacturing, engineering and automation demonstrated a Care-O-bot that sweeps office floors and empties bins. Pal Robotics showed Stockbot, which walks the aisles in a shop or warehouse to check inventory at night. By Anonymous Automatica Munich Socalled Service Automation

We need to shop," Paul said, peering over his shoulder."True. We should do it together." [ ... ]"We can hold up cucumbers in the produce section and make suggestive gestures at each other with them. By Kaje Harper True Paul Shop Peering Shoulder

This morning I'm a mosquito, now you're a flying cart? Arosia By Marc Secchia Mosquito Cart Arosia Morning Flying

I found a big crate with the letters MAP on the side. According to the manifest, it stands for 'Mobile Assault Package.' Apparently navy-speak for a big box of guns, By James S.a. Corey Map Side Big Found Crate

The Book BoothThere's not a big selection,It's not locked for protection,But at the intersectionOf Booth and Telephone,Two customers politelyCan snuggle in it (tightly)And go once over (lightly)The books they'd like to own."Readcycle" means you leave one -A book you love. Retrieve one ... Who knows? You might receive oneYou haven't read before.Hats off to the committeeFor such an itty-bittyLibrary in the city,Which proves that less is more. By J. Patrick Lewis Readcycle Book Booth Tightly Lightly

I wanted to create a new way of looking at retail. By Tory Burch Retail Wanted Create

Christmas is about community, collaboration, celebration. Done right, Christmas can be an antidote to the Me First mentality that has rebranded capitalism as neo-liberalism. The shopping mall isn't our true home, nor is it a public space, though, as libraries, parks, playgrounds, museums and sports facilities disappear, for many the fake friendliness of the mall is the only public space left, apart from the streets By Jeanette Winterson Christmas Collaboration Celebration Community Mall

Comstock, but I left a wrong impression with you. I don't want By Gene Stratton-Porter Comstock Left Wrong Impression

The shelves had been stripped bare and battered to Hell, as if some super-important Christmas toy release had come and gone and an army of Super-Moms had ripped through the store, buying everything up like an all-consuming void. Didn't hurt that many of the shelves were lined with piles of bones both animal and human. By Chuck Wendig Hell Christmas Store Buying Void

There were all manners of souvenirs and trinkets for sale when Ciro and Luigi disembarked from the ferry into the port of lower Manhattan. Signs advertising Sherman Turner cigars, Zilita Black tobacco, and Roisin's Doughnuts graced rolling carts selling Sally Dally Notions and Flowers by Yvonne Benne. The stands competed for the immigrant business. Ciro and Luigi came face to face with the engine of American life: You work, and then you spend. By Adriana Trigiani Manhattan Luigi Ciro Manners Souvenirs