On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 10:24 AM Paul Allen wrote:
> Indeed. All we can try to do is sort it all out. To do that, we need to
> know what we
> are talking about. I think we can ignore whatever it was the original poster
> intended.
> I blame Google Translate. :)
So, solving the original
Am Mo., 16. Sept. 2019 um 17:01 Uhr schrieb Paul Allen :
> On Mon, 16 Sep 2019 at 15:30, Kevin Kenny wrote:
>
>> So, solving the original poster's problem is now out of scope? :shrug:
>>
>
> Not entirely out of scope. But we shouldn't let whatever he or she was
> trying to
> achieve twist our
How to tag a
oneway street with a combined foot-cycle lanes on either side with oneway
restrictions for bicycles.
To understand my description you need to look at the photo:
http://www.mapillary.com/map/im/ndVXZQlQxoTi_678lWXc9A/photo
Thanks in advance
Volker
On 15/09/2019 22:45, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
I would use “motorbus” for the bus class, motorcar and motorcycle indicate
there’s a system.
Must say 'motor bus' sounds really quaint to an English speaker. It's a
term that belongs to the early 1900s when there were still maybe a few
On Mon, 16 Sep 2019 at 23:51, Graeme Fitzpatrick
wrote:
> Only knowing Australian buses / coaches, I'm not sure if this applies
> world-wide, but a major distinction between the two here, is that a coach
> has a toilet on board, while a bus doesn't.
>
Wow! You have posh coaches there!
More
Only knowing Australian buses / coaches, I'm not sure if this applies
world-wide, but a major distinction between the two here, is that a coach
has a toilet on board, while a bus doesn't.
Thanks
Graeme
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I guess that's the difference when your long trip is 1 hour! :-)
Thanks
Graeme
On Tue, 17 Sep 2019 at 08:59, Paul Allen wrote:
> On Mon, 16 Sep 2019 at 23:51, Graeme Fitzpatrick
> wrote:
>
>> Only knowing Australian buses / coaches, I'm not sure if this applies
>> world-wide, but a major
On 17/09/19 04:11, Paul Allen wrote:
On Mon, 16 Sep 2019 at 18:25, Martin Koppenhoefer
mailto:dieterdre...@gmail.com>> wrote:
is "motorcar" a term that is common in British English?
Not much.
How do you tag the generic bus class in Britain?
Is there such a thing? There are
On 17/9/19 05:29, Volker Schmidt wrote:
How to tag a
oneway street with a combined foot-cycle lanes on either side with oneway
restrictions for bicycles.
To understand my description you need to look at the photo:
http://www.mapillary.com/map/im/ndVXZQlQxoTi_678lWXc9A/photo
The easiest way
What about long_distance_bus, if you don't like coach? motorbus doesn't
really convey much information. All buses we are talking about have a
motor. The only exception I can think of is this Italian pedibus, which
isn't really a bus at all. (Accompanied children who take the same
itinerary on a
sent from a phone
> On 16. Sep 2019, at 08:07, Jo wrote:
>
> What about long_distance_bus, if you don't like coach? motorbus doesn't
> really convey much information. All buses we are talking about have a motor.
Sorry, it may not have been clear, “motorbus” would be used as a generic term
On Mon, 16 Sep 2019 at 07:13, Jo wrote:
> What about long_distance_bus, if you don't like coach? motorbus doesn't
> really convey much information. All buses we are talking about have a motor.
>
Indeed. Also, it's not a term I've encountered very often (if at all) in
British English.
> When
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