Human-powered land vehicle
Human-powered land vehicles are land vehicles propelled over ground by human power, The main ways to support the weight of a human-powered land vehicle and its contents above the ground are rolling contact; sliding contact; intermittent contact; no contact at all as with anything carried; or some combination of the above.[1] The main methods of using human power to propel a land vehicle are some kind of drivetrain; pushing laterally against the ground with a wheel, skate, or ski that simultaneously moves forward; by pushing against the ground directly with an appendage opposite to the direction of travel; or by propeller. Human-powered land vehicles can be propelled by persons riding in the vehicle or by persons walking or running and not supported by the vehicle.

Many human-powered land vehicles can also be gravity-powered land vehicles, and vice versa, although some of the latter are quite awkward to use as the former. For example: street luges, gravity racers, and snow boards.
Types of ground contact
    
There are four main ways to support the weight of a human-powered land vehicle and its contents: rolling contact as with wheels; sliding contact as with skates, skis, or runners; intermittent contact as with stilts; and no contact at all as with anything carried. Additionally, these four methods may be combined as in wheelbarrows.
Wheeled
    
The most common wheeled human-powered land vehicle is the bicycle in all its forms. Other notable examples include:
- Balance bicycles and dandy horses
- Handcars, and draisines
- Hotchkiss Bicycle Railroad and shweeb
- Inline skates, roller skates, and roller skis
- Kick scooters, kickbikes, knee scooters, and square scooters
- Rickshaws, prams, strollers, roller buggies and buggies/Shopping trolley (caddy)
- Skateboards, longboards, Penny boards, snakeboards, caster boards, Freeline skates, Surfskate (or Carveboard)
- Tricycles, quadracycles, and velomobiles
- Trikkes
- Unicycles
- Wheelchairs and baby walkers
- Heel Skates
 Cycling Cycling
 Longboarding Longboarding
 Wheelchair Wheelchair
 Rollerskating Rollerskating
 Rickshaw Rickshaw
Sliding
    
 Snowboarding Snowboarding
 Ice skating Ice skating
 Sledding Sledding
.jpg.webp) Skiing Skiing
.jpg.webp) Clap skating Clap skating
Intermittent
    
Types of propulsion
    
There are three main methods of using human power to propel a land vehicle: some kind of drivetrain that turns one or more drive wheels; pushing laterally against the ground, to the side relative to the forward motion of the vehicle, with a wheel, skate, or ski that simultaneously moves forward; by pushing against the ground directly with an appendage, such as a hand or a foot, opposite to the direction of travel, or by pushing against the air with a propeller.[2]
Drivetrain
    
Lateral motion of one or more wheels, skis, or skates
    
Direct contact with the ground
    
References
    
-  Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.). 1989. vehicle, n. 6. A means of conveyance provided with wheels or runners and used for the carriage of persons or goods; a carriage, cart, wagon, sledge, or similar contrivance. 7. a. Any means of carriage, conveyance, or transport; a receptacle in which anything is placed in order to be moved. 
- Melissa Wagenberg Lasher (2007). "The Propeller Trike". Popular Mechanics. Retrieved 2012-05-30.