It is normally the immediate family of the person that has died, such as parents, brothers and sisters, if there are no immediate relatives then it would be aunts, uncles cousins and so on, however it is up to the family arranging the funeral to decide who goes where. Indeed, the deceased may have already decided before they died by making their own funeral arrangements.
in the first car you can have 6 people,then the second car 7 because someone can sit next to the driver
I believe a funeral car is called a hearse.
A Driver education car or a teaching car will have an extra brake pedal on the passenger side where the instructor sits. Some cars will also have a second steering wheel.
What kind of car is is? When it jerk while shutting off, do you turn the key off and it sits there chugging for a second before stopping?
It's the car the carries the coffin with deceased individual in it to the funeral
The cast of Orange Quarters - 1998 includes: Kevin Allison as First Funeral Priest Ben Coopersmith as First Funeral Mourner Marc Forget as First Funeral Mourner Martha Hagen as First Funeral Mourner Darin Hallinan as First Funeral Mourner Derrick Harley as First Funeral Mourner Nina Hellman as Second Funeral Mourner Todd Holoubek as Second Funeral Mourner Morgan Intrieri as Second Funeral Mourner Kerri Kenney as First Funeral Mourner Christina Kirk as First Funeral Mourner Joe Lo Truglio as Additional Voices Edgar Oliver as Second Funeral Priest Michael Patrick Jann as First Funeral Mourner
Passenger
YES
It's called a hearse.
The simple predicate in the sentence "In the back of the shed sits a mint-condition car" is "sits." The simple predicate refers to the main verb or verb phrase that tells what the subject is doing, which in this case is the action of the car being located or positioned.
no Janet Jackson was the youngest at the funeral,Michael was the second youngest in the family, not including the kids
It is called a Hearse. A hearse is a funeral vehicle used to carry a coffin from a church or funeral home to a cemetery. In the funeral trade, hearses are often called funeral coaches.