Do you say I'm on the bus or in the bus?
Do you say I'm on the bus or in the bus? Use on for large vehicles which you can stand and walk around in (a bus, an airplane, a train, a metro/subway car, a cruise ship, a boat). Use in for (usually) smaller vehicles or crafts that you have to enter and sit in (a car, a taxi, a truck, a helicopter, a canoe, a kayak, a small boat, a carriage, a rickshaw).
Is it by foot or on foot?
'On foot' is the more commonly used expression. This also stems from the fact that 'on' is usually used for actions involving body parts. 'By' is usually used to talk about a means of transport (i.e. train, car, boat, plane, etc). They both have the same meaning, albeit with different grammatical structure.
Is it in a taxi or on a taxi?
GRAMMAR: Patterns with taxi• You say get in a taxi: He got in a taxi and left. ?Don't say: get on a taxi• You say get out of a taxi: Two women got out of the taxi. ?Don't say: get off a taxi• You say that someone is in a taxi: I read my notes while I was in the taxi.
Why doesn t London have school buses?
The UK has a much more extensive public transport system than most places in the USA, so in many places, secondary school pupils can just use an ordinary scheduled bus or other public transport to get to school, especially in cities. It does - but they are very rare.
Do we get in a bus or on a bus?
The answer is “on”! We get on or get onto a bus, train, subway, airplane, bicycle, and motorcycle. But we get in or get into a car, truck, or taxi. So use get on for mass public transportation, like buses and trains, as well as bicycles and motorcycles, where you are sitting on a seat but not in an enclosed space.