One who travels in a train using ticket is called a passenger. One who runs the train by using locomotive/engine is called a driver/locopilot.
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The conductor title is most common in North American railway operations, but the role is common worldwide under various job titles. In Commonwealth English, a conductor is also known as guard or train manager. A conductor on an Amtrak train.
Today, there is a higher degree of automation than ever on heavy, inter-city and high speed train services. However, just as with aircraft, there is still always a driver or engineer on board, with various levels of control, as well as overall management of the train, rather like a ship's captain.
By Philip Kendall. Women-only cars on Japan's railways have existed in some form or other for more than 50 years, with “hana densha” (literally “flower train”) carriages originally being introduced as a way of keeping female students safe from the advances of lecherous men during the peak hours.
You can ride a train, or you can take a train. What's the difference? You use ride when you want to talk about the experience of riding, or when you want to describe something that happened while you were riding the train: I love riding the train in the middle of the day when it's not crowded.
Etymology 1. From Middle English trayne (“train”), from Old French train (“a delay, a drawing out”), from traïner (“to pull out, to draw”), from Vulgar Latin *tragino, from *trago, from Latin traho (“to pull, to draw”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *treg?- (“to pull, draw, drag”).
The term loco pilot is synonymous with train driver and the two are often used interchangeably. The duties of an assistant loco pilot and a senior loco pilot are not the same. Senior loco pilots make decisions related to the operation of the train and hence may be considered train drivers.
From the 1730s engineer in North American English was being used as a synonym for engineman, she says, applied specifically to the driver or operator of a fire engine, then later to drivers of steamships and steam-powered locomotives.