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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Motorise

Motorise \Mo"tor*ise\ (m[=o]"t[~e]r*[imac]z), v. t. same as motorize. [Brit.]

Wiktionary
motorise

vb. (alternative spelling of motorize English)

WordNet
motorise

v. equip with armed and armored motor vehicles; "mechanize armies" [syn: mechanize, mechanise, motorize]

Usage examples of "motorise".

Either the remnants of Major Helder's motorised column south of Lillehammer had been mopped up or the Germans had taken the town and released the traffic.

We can't stop the troops across the water but what we can do is to stop the motorised column by making a road barrier.

It was considered unlikely that the surviving Germans from the motorised columns would attack again for some little time and providing they could be prevented from advancing towards the town that was all that was required.

It wasn't even as though there was no other motorised traffic around any more: registered in Thuhn alone there were now at least seventeen other cars, buses, vans and trucks to have collisions with, most brought in during the heady days of Thulahn's motoring Golden Age, between the summer of 1989, when a supposedly permanent road had been completed direct from Thuhn to the outside world, and the spring of 1991, when a series of landslides and floods had swept it away again.

The alternative to flying was finding some motorised transport and taking the long road north and west and eventually south and back to India.

She was one of those cyclists who felt that red lights were only for motorised vehicles, and that pavements weren't just for pedestrians.

No lights, no tarmac, McDonald's wrappers, training shoes, no motorised robots on four wheels.

Hit-and-run amnesia is what the polis call it, but to Spring-Heeled Jack it’s just more loot to buy fuel for his Russian army-surplus motorised combat boots.