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Possible Duplicate:
Origin/reason for the expression “on the bus” instead of “in the bus”

Can we really "get in a bus" or "get on a bus" in Standard English usage?

  • I recommend looking up "on" and "in" a dictionary. In Collins, for example, each word has more than 30 meanings listed. That gives these words a lot of flexibility in usage. If you hear a preposition being used a certain way on a regular basis, chances are, that's an acceptable use in that context. Or maybe you only asked to post an answer? In that case, I'll just leave this comment for anyone else who lands on this page. – J.R. Sep 26 '12 at 18:08
  • This is a duplicate only becase it was never answered in the original question, having repeadedly been cited as a duplicate therein as well. It is impossible to comment, ask, answer there as it is CLOSED. – user26555 Sep 27 '12 at 22:48

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The many postulations and subtexts were surprising within a previous such question, as was the fact that no one addressed the flaw within the question.

Instead, would we not "get INTO a bus" or "get ONTO a bus," given that we are referring not to the act of BEING on the bus ALREADY but to the act of actively boarding the bus, hence, the simple difference between the use of the prepositions IN and INTO (on/onto) within Standard English.