Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Traducciones en contexto de "get on the bus" en inglés-español de Reverso Context: You pay at a kiosk before you get on the bus.

  2. I'm going to get there early to make sure we get a seat on the bus. To a certain extent, objects that are part of the bus are on the bus, and those which can be removed are either in or on the bus.

  3. 22 de ene. de 2016 · Then you could explain that people get used to saying things in a certain way, and that it sounds a little bit odd when they hear somebody else say it in a different way, for no reason at all. It may sound so odd that only non-natives or creative writers would ever dream of using it. "I got into the bus" belongs to that category, I think.

  4. You never get in the bus unless it's a small bus the size of a car; you always get on the bus. But you get in a car not the other way around. I guess, it has to do with the size of these machines.

  5. 20 de oct. de 2014 · In some situations if you wanted to stress that you were going by bus, as opposed to walking or some other transport mode, it might be appropriate to say I shall go on a bus (indef. article essential).

  6. 21 de feb. de 2013 · 'A' generally refers to any type of car/bus, etc, whereas 'the' refers to the specific bus/train that we use regularly and may be on at the time of this call coming. People do use both, but 'the' is the more common one.

  7. Both “On the bus” and “In the bus” are grammatically correct, and there are no strict rules about which preposition you must use in a specific context. “On the bus” is commonly used to refer to passengers, while “In the bus” is used to refer to something inside the bus.