Bus = bus or coach
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'bus matron' is a noun for a female.There is no equivalent noun for a male.The common gender noun is attendant (or bus attendant).
hmm my strictly old English aka Anglo saxon dictionary doesnt give any word bus nor could there have been a word for a bus in the old English language but the present English word bus is old enough to go back to 1832 anyway when a public conveyance which had been called an omnibus since 1820 was shortened to bus perhaps by commuters in a hurry to catch it omnibus itself was just an old latin word meaning for the benefit or use of all & everyone its forgotten omni part means all & everyone & the bus suffix means for the benefit or use of so basically the old English word for bus to the extent that it really is old at all came from the much older latin suffix meaning f o r
"When will the bus arrive?" The noun in the sentence is bus, a word for a thing.
No. You are riding the bus.
In British English, a bus is commonly referred to as a "coach" or simply a "bus" depending on the context and size of the vehicle.
A double-decker bus maybe.
To call a bus its apa basa phona
Bus = bus or coach
I think..... because bus is... kinda a.... I do not know
Tour bus?
bus fare
The Kikuyu word for the English word bus is "basi."
Maybe... bus stop or garage?
''Bus pass''
I go by bus.
whatv do you call the manor woman who collects fares on bus