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Why are buses not busses?

When the word bus was new, the two plurals were in competition, but buses overtook busses in frequency in the 1930s, and today is the overwhelming choice of writers and editors. Busses was the preferred form in Merriam-Webster dictionaries until 1961.



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Both are correct, but busses lost its popularity. There are no other single-syllable words that end with a single s, so no rule has ever been set, and the usage of busses has gone rare to the extent that it seems like a grammatical mistake.

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In Britain, a comfortable bus that carries passengers on long journeys is called a coach. The coach leaves Cardiff at twenty to eight. In America, a vehicle designed for long journeys is usually called a bus.

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Why don't city buses in most UK cities have rear doors? Because almost all buses now in use are single manned - you have to pay your fare to the driver and s/he has to sit at the front for obvious reasons! Rear doors are simply not practical with driver-only operation.

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Articulated buses, colloquially known as bendy buses, were rarely used in the United Kingdom compared to other countries, until the turn of the millennium. This was due to a preference for the double-decker bus for use on high capacity routes.

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After all, landmarks might confuse passengers that the bus would travel to them, whereas the buses are given a real human feel by using names. So since 1999, every new bus that has entered the fleet has been named after a deceased person.

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(br?li ) Word forms: plural brollies. countable noun. A brolly is the same as an umbrella. [British, informal]

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