[f. as VEHICULATE v.: see -ATION, and cf. med.L. vehiculatio.] Conveyance by means of a vehicle or vehicles; vehicular activity or traffic.
1834. Gen. P. Thompson, Exerc. (1842), III. 148. By a sort of parallel to the Game Laws, certain modes of vehiculation were to be peculiar to the magnificos.
1851. Carlyle, in New Review, Dec. (1891), 482. Boulevards very stirring, airy, locomotive to a fair degree, but the vehiculation very light. Ibid. (1866), E. Irving, in Remin. (1881), II. 212. The New Road with its lively traffic and vehiculation.
1895. Daily Chron., 12 Nov., 4/4. We know of nothing more handsome or inviting in the literature of vehiculation.