Car of the Year: Difference between revisions
Content deleted Content added
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
* ''[[Top Gear (current format)|Top Gear]]'s'' [[Top Gear (current format)#Car of the Year|Car of the Year Awards]] |
* ''[[Top Gear (current format)|Top Gear]]'s'' [[Top Gear (current format)#Car of the Year|Car of the Year Awards]] |
||
* ''[[Wheels magazine|Wheels]]'' magazine's [[Wheels Car of the Year|Car of the Year]] |
* ''[[Wheels magazine|Wheels]]'' magazine's [[Wheels Car of the Year|Car of the Year]] |
||
* ''[[EVO magazine]]'s Evo Car of the year [eCoty] |
* ''[[EVO (magazine)]]'s Evo Car of the year [eCoty] |
||
[[Category:Automobile awards]] |
[[Category:Automobile awards]] |
Revision as of 05:43, 6 September 2008
Car of the Year is a phrase usually considered to have been invented by Motor Trend magazine in the 1950s for their annual award for best automobile. The magazine still gives this award.
It also refers to an award given yearly to the new automobile selected best by a jury of journalists for motor magazines in Europe.
Although other similar awards exist in other parts of the world like Australia from the Australian automobile magazine Wheels and the AJAC in Canada, these two are the major ones that use the phrase, which is sometimes abbreviated COTY.
International
- European Car of the Year
- International Car of the Year
- Green Car Journal's Green Car of the Year
- World Car of the Year
National
- Canadian Car of the Year
- Car and Driver magazine's Ten Best
- Japan Car of the Year
- Lithuanian Car of the Year
- Motor Trend magazine's Motor Trend Car of the Year
- MotorWeek magazine's Driver's Choice Awards
- North American Car of the Year
- Road & Track magazine's Ten Best
- RJC Car of the Year (Japan)[1]
- Top Gear's Car of the Year Awards
- Wheels magazine's Car of the Year
- EVO (magazine)'s Evo Car of the year [eCoty]