I am unfamiliar with what it would mean in Latin, however when I saw it I automatically thought you meant donderbus which is Dutch. donder- Thunder and bus- pipe which is how the Blunderbuss got it's name.
The word "bus" comes from the Latin word "omnibus," which means "for all" or "for everyone."
The word bus is derived from 'omnibus vehicle'. Omnibus is Latin for 'for all'.
From the Latin word "omnibus" which means "for all."
The word bus, for a form of motorized public transport, is contracted from omnibus, the Latin word meaning " for everyone."
One word? How about 'omnibus'. Derived from the Latin meaning 'for all'.
The word is Omnibus - a large motor vehicle designed to carry passengers. The Latin prefix 'omni' meaning all or every...
It is a Latin word meaning everyone or everything. The first examples of public transport were called "omnibus vehicles" because they carried everyone. Eventually that got shortened to "omnibus" and finally to "bus".
"un autobus" (masc) is the French noun for a bus (they do also say "bus")
Bus is the short version of the word Omnibus, which is a four wheel public vehicle with seats. The prefix Omni in Latin means 'all' and omnibus in Latin means 'for all'. The word was introduced into France in the early 1800's meaning, at that time, a man or boy who assists a waiter at a restaurant.
"all stops" in Latin. A bus or train that stops in every bus stop or train station, as opposed to a direct train that goes from one city to the terminus (the "last stop").
The Kikuyu word for the English word bus is "basi."
MAH-trih-bus.