よこそう yokoso means welcome in general
Yes, it can be. But it can also be an adverb ("Come aboard"). It refers to riding in or on a vehicle, such as a ship, plane, train, or bus.
Yes, it is one word "aboard" -- as an adverb or preposition, it means "on board" a vehicle such as a bus, train, plane, or ship.
All Aboard the Blue Train was created on 1962-11-15.
It means got off from some form of transport - bus, train, plane, etc
get to the bus stop before the bus pulls off. To "catch" a bus, train, plane, or other vehicle just means that you got there on time and boarded. The image is of you chasing after the vehicle and catching it so you can climb on.
105 pounds on train but on plane why more 105 pounds on train but on plane why more 105 pounds on train but on plane why more 105 pounds on train but on plane why more
A Berth
Train.
A fast train can be faster than a slow plane. But even a regular plane will be faster than fast train.
Amtrak
Crazy Train
Genevieve