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Why do we say cab?

The earliest form of horse-drawn vehicle available for hire was called a 'cab' (short for cabriolet). The name stuck when cab firms upgraded to motorized vehicles, fitted with a 'taximeter' (which measured how far you'd gone).



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But cab is not short for taxicab; rather, it comes from cabriolet, which in its original use referred to a two-wheeled, one-horse carriage with a leather hood that folded down. These carriages were rented out for hire.

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Most of the English speaking countries use both words while the non-English speaking ones use taxi almost exclusively, or a regional derivative. Cab and taxi are two words we use to refer to a type of vehicle for hire with a driver.

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A cab is a taxi.

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The famous London taxis are actually called 'hackney carriages' but in London we just call them 'black cabs/taxis'. London taxi drivers have to pass a special exam called the Knowledge to get their license so if you take a black cab, you can be sure the driver will know the way.

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Taxicabs are the only vehicles that have the right to pick up street-hailing and prearranged passengers anywhere in New York City. By law, there are 13,587 taxis in New York City and each taxi must have a medallion affixed to it.

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What is correct in New York City, taxi or cab? Both are correct as the terms originated from the original word “taxicab”. Most people do call them taxis here.

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Officially, taxi is short for taximeter cab, as they were originally named at the turn of the 20th century.

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Stop Here or Stop here, please is fine, especially if both of you are speaking English as a second language.

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A taxi rank is a place where taxis wait for passengers, for example at an airport or outside a station. American English: taxi stand /'tæksi ?stænd/

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Unofficial drivers were barred from picking up people on the street, but they readily found business in under-served neighborhoods. In 1967, New York City ordered all medallion taxis be painted yellow to help cut down on unofficial drivers and make official taxicabs more readily recognizable.

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The results might shock you. She found that without tips or surge pricing, hailing a cab was always less expensive than an UberX or a standard Lyft. Cab prices averaged 35-83% less than a ride-share. Prices for the same rides on the taxi cab app CURB varied.

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In British slang, bloody means something like “very.” That's bloody brilliant! Things that are literally bloody have blood on them or are made of blood. Figuratively bloody things, on the other hand, only imply blood — a bloody coup, for example, is a government overthrow that involves some amount of violence.

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In England it's a Garage, in Scoland its a “car Hoose” in Wales it called a “sheep shed with an up and over door” and in Northern Ireland it's a “Wee cold place to keep kids bikes and other stuff”

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Taxicabs and other vehicles-for-hire in Canada are regulated by local municipalities and provinces, and are owned & operated by private companies and individuals. Unlicensed cabs in some cities are referred to as bandit taxis/cabs. Most cabs are large sedans with various colours and of domestic make.

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