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- Q138425 subject Q6158701.
- Q138425 subject Q7320804.
- Q138425 abstract "A vis-à-vis is a carriage in which the passengers sit face to face with the front passengers facing rearward and the rear passengers facing forward. The term comes from the French vis-à-vis, meaning face to face. These carriages are still commonly made by Amish carriage makers in the midwestern United States. Also in the Western world, the vis-a-vis is the most common type of carriage style used to cart tourists and leisure seekers in downtown urban settings.".
- Q138425 thumbnail 2009-09-23_Vis_a_Vis_Kutschenmuseum.jpg?width=300.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q104444.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q150.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q15455149.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q160381.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q186545.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q2144333.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q235356.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q6158701.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q7320804.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q741608.
- Q138425 wikiPageWikiLink Q897404.
- Q138425 comment "A vis-à-vis is a carriage in which the passengers sit face to face with the front passengers facing rearward and the rear passengers facing forward. The term comes from the French vis-à-vis, meaning face to face. These carriages are still commonly made by Amish carriage makers in the midwestern United States. Also in the Western world, the vis-a-vis is the most common type of carriage style used to cart tourists and leisure seekers in downtown urban settings.".
- Q138425 label "Vis-à-vis (carriage)".
- Q138425 depiction 2009-09-23_Vis_a_Vis_Kutschenmuseum.jpg.