From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishprampram /præm/ noun [countable]  British EnglishDHB a small vehicle with four wheels in which a baby can lie down while it is being pushed SYN baby carriage American English → buggy a young woman pushing a pram
                                                    
                                                Examples from the Corpus
pram• And I've got a pram in the back of the shop.• She hit him so savagely that a woman with a pram told her to calm down.• Pushchairs and prams are not admitted - backpacks available.• Many have prams attached to accommodate babies.• As this was also unsuccessful, she thought again and then emptied the pram of its contents.• Frantically - but much too late - she ran in chase of the pram.• The artefacts he'd collected were everywhere and the cellar was full of old toys and Victorian prams. 
