Bus - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A bus is a large wheeled vehicle meant to carry many passengers along with the bus driver. It is larger than a car or van. The name is a shortened version of omnibus, which means "for everyone" in Latin. Unlike trams or rapid transit trains. Buses used to be called omnibuses, but people now simply call them "buses".
Buses are an important part of public transport in places all over the world. Many people who do not have cars, especially the third world countries, use buses to get around. Buses make it easy for them to get to where they want to go.
Buses can have many types of bus. For example : a single decker bus or a double decker bus.
A place where people wait for a local bus is called a bus stop. A building where people wait for a long-distance bus or where many buses meet is called a bus station.
There are many types of bus around the world. An example is a motorhome, which is a bus-like vehicle equipped for living. Typically, a motorhome will include a lounge area, dining area, small bathroom, a galley, kitchen and a corridor.
Types of buses
[change | change source]Gallery
[change | change source]- A Wright Streetlite single-decker bus in the United Kingdom
- A Alexander Dennis Enviro500 MMC double-decker bus in Singapore
- A typical American school bus
- First gasoline is common for a bus of the world, 1895
- A bus stop in Paris
Other websites
[change | change source]- Media related to Buses at Wikimedia Commons