Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Apr 13, 2015 · 3. Get a bus vs take a bus. You can use either get a bus or take a bus, without any difference in meaning. See Oxford Learners (American or British). However, the use of "take" is more common than that of "get". The verb "catch" is also common here. Moreover, when you go onto a bus, train, aircraft, you usually use get on.

  2. 1. When you ride on a bus, usually you are in the bus. If you use. There must be a cellphone charger on the bus. it would mean somewhere within the bus either someone might have a charger or the bus company supplied one for general use on the the bus. The charger itself would be considered to be in the bus. in the bus.

  3. Jan 29, 2017 · to make more sense if you can walk inside the vehicle (to get to your seat) then there is enough surface inside the vehicle. (it takes steps to get to your seat inside the vehicles and you are walking to your seat actually) and what do we use for the surface? "on" ( get on the surface) so plane/train/boat/bus/ are treated like a surface.

  4. Jul 10, 2020 · Trains will usually leave pretty close to their scheduled time, but bus schedules are more affected by traffic. A bus that arrives at 9:20 might be a very late 9:00 bus, a somewhat late 9:10 bus, or an on-time 9:20 bus. In any case, you just get on whatever bus arrives first, which might be of indeterminate (and irrelevant) scheduling origin.

  5. As you mentioned, you can use in for getting inside a vehicle (e.g., get in the van), and you can use on for getting atop a vehicle (e.g. get on the bike). The one exception to this seems to be when you use on as a shortened form of on board, hence: get on the train, get on the plane, get on the bus, get on the ship. Anytime someone can ...

  6. Jul 16, 2021 · I'm taking a bus. refers to the choice of mode of transportation, and may or may not refer to the future. I'm on a bus. means that I have boarded. It may not mean that the bus is already moving, but probably does. I'm riding a bus. sounds strange. It's not a horse.

  7. Feb 1, 2023 · We often say "Oh, I have missed the bus" when the bus had left before I arrived at the bus stop. Now, I was on the bus and busy talking with a friend and forgot to get off the bus at a correct bus stop. Is it correct to say "Oh, I have missed the stop" the same way we say "Oh, I have missed the bus"?

  8. Feb 13, 2012 · UK. May 26, 2013. #5. There's no difference in meaning, just in usage. In the UK, we "get a bus" or "go/come on the bus". In AmE, they "take a/the bus". W.

  9. Oct 30, 2007 · No. Generally people don't stand in a helicopter but we say "I got in the helicopter". This topic has been discussed before and we keep coming to the conclusion that there is no hard and fast rule about the preposition which goes with a particular form of transport. I got in the car. I got in the taxi. I got in the helicopter. I got in the lorry.

  10. Get away. » Example: The robbers GOT AWAY in a stolen car, which the police later found abandoned. » Example: We love to GET AWAY from everything and relax in the country. » Example: He didn't come because he was stuck at work and couldn't GET AWAY.