"bus" is short for "autobus", but this is now an obsolete word.
"car" and "autocar" (also obsolete) are slightly different:
A "bus" means the public transportation vehicle inside a city or agglomeration.
A "car" means the public transportation vehicle that links cities or countries.
They both have the same shape and transport about the same amount of persons, just not for the same distance.
A bus is 'un bus' in French.
autobus
Bus is masculine: un bus
"un autobus" (masc) is the French noun for a bus (they do also say "bus")
Voiture means Car in French , :D
The gender of a word is completely contingent on the language in question. In all languages that I am aware of, however, the word for "bus" is masculine.
un car de ramassage scolaire
"un bus" is a bus in French.
The noun 'bus' is a noun; a word for a vehicle for transporting passengers, a word for a thing.The word 'bus' is also a verb: bus, buses, busing, bused.The noun form of the verb to 'bus' is the gerund, busing.
"A bus" and "one bus" are English equivalents of the French phrase un autobus.Specifically, the word unmeans "a" as a masculine singular indefinite article and "one" as a number. The masculine noun autobus translates as "bus". The pronunciation will be "eh-no-to-byooss" in French.
a bus stop is 'un arrêt de bus' in French.
Yes, the compound noun 'bus station' is a common noun, a word for any bus station anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:City of McAllen: Central Bus Station, McAllen, TXBristol Bus Station, Marlborough Street, Bristol, UKPudu Sentral Bus Station, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia"Bernie Magruder and the Bus Station Blow Up" by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor