you are in the bus
That is an idiomatic expression, and the correct answer varies depending on your location. Generally, the British say "in," Americans "on."
Yes, at least in some states. I've seen signs that say, "Right turn in front of bus is illegal". It should say, "Right turn across front of bus is illegal".
Those boys ride the bus to school every single school day
correct
if im correct it would be 70 legs
The correct way to say it is eighty and four hundred fifty three thousandths.
Yes. If you say you're on the bus, you would literally mean you sitting on top of the bus.
No, standing on bus stop is not correct. Standing at the bus stop is correct.
You might want to say, "My wife does not enjoy travelling via bus." or, "My wife doesn't like catching the bus." Or a mixture of the two, e.g. "My wife does not enjoy catching the bus."
No. You are riding the bus.
My brother goes to the bus station
It's correct, as far as it goes, but better would be; My wife does not get on well, travelling by bus. My wife travels well, except by bus. Your original sentence is coincidental rather than causative. My examples more closely connect the bus travel with the 'unwellness'.
That is the correct spelling of "bus" tables (clear and clean).
The correct thing to say is...'in spite of running quickly he could not catch the bus'Thank you for reading my answer.
Both are correct, with different meaning. On the bus means "taking a bus trip." In the bus means "actually inside the bus."
bus
Certainly. The sentence has a subject, a verb, and an object modified by an adjective. It would still be correct grammatically if it ran " You drank an imaginary bus." Remember that "grammatically correct" and "meaningful" are not the same.
אוטובוס‎-bus