TinFoilHat
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I come in a tranny used to be such an innocent phrase."in the back of a transit van" suggests not :)
View attachment 134282
I come in a tranny used to be such an innocent phrase."in the back of a transit van" suggests not :)
View attachment 134282
Both.
why do we say...
"in" a car?
everything else is "on"...
on a bus
on a train
on a boat
on a tram
on a plane
et catera
in point of fact,
grammatically, shouldn't they all be "in"?
“Daddy, why do you call a small child ‘Darling’?”My 4 year old has just moved into the "why" phase.
I tell you what, that makes you think about the world. She's had me flapping like mad at time.
"Dad, why is the sky blue?"
"Why do we have cars?"
"Why do we walk?"
"Why do you have a name?"
"Why does the moon shine?"
"Why are you called Daddy?"
Sometimes you have to fall back on the old "We just do, darling".
It’s what we do over here, rather than calling our kids by our own name and making them call us “Sir”.“Daddy, why do you call a small child ‘Darling’?”
Grammatically, they’re all the same. Logistically, they may be different, but grammatically, they’re all correct.why do we say...
"in" a car?
everything else is "on"...
on a bus
on a train
on a boat
on a tram
on a plane
et catera
in point of fact,
grammatically, shouldn't they all be "in"?
Respect. Never goes out of style, honeybuns.It’s what we do over here, rather than calling our kids by our own name and making them call us “Sir”.
you can stand up in the back of a large mobilehome as much as you like, though, whether it's moving or not.A car has always been a sit down form of transport. The others can, and have, been used in part as standing vehicles.
exactly.Grammatically, they’re all the same. Logistically, they may be different, but grammatically, they’re all correct.
“I am on a bus” is grammatically correct, as is “I am in a car.” However, your mind’s eye might not envisage that first sentence as intended, based on where you actually are logistically, even though it is common parlance.