You ride a horse, you drive a car.
you generally use ride for something which requires a manual activity to run the machine or a animal. Eg. ride a horse, ride a bicycle. These are driven by us. Whereas drive is generally used for machines which are driven on fuel and we only manoeure it.
--->You drive a car. This means you sit in a seat and control the vehicle via controls... --->You ride a motorcycle. This means that you grip and control the bike via you whole body moving your weight left and right, backward and forward
--------I think in riding you need to balance yourself(in case of bike you balance your body and bike by yourself, but in horse riding you balance your body only) but in driving no need to balance your body, you can sit easily and drive.
drive takes work and when you ride all you do is sit there :)
there is no difference but there is technically no such thing as a riding 'Rink'
Stuff and stuff.
Not according to the law.
The Hackney Horse is a very old British breed used for riding & driving. The Hackney Pony is a derivative of the Hackney Horse & British ponies, developed in the late 1800s for show ring driving.
I don't believe there is a difference other than the sole. They were designed for the same thing: To protect your feet.
Driving Under Intoxication and Driving While Intoxicated . Idk what's the legal difference but that's the difference between the two acronyms .
767 miles
Riding bicycles has sometimes been shown to promote good driving later in life.
The cost of gas
Basically they are for different climate/riding conditions.
There are two basic styles of riding boots for English riding. Field and dress boots. Most dressage riders use dress boots while competing.
Potential difference between electrodes