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autobus

[aw-tuh-buhs]

noun

plural

autobuses, autobusses 
  1. bus.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of autobus1

An Americanism dating back to 1895–1900; auto- 2 + bus 1
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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In landlocked Granada, group tours command vans, taxis and autobuses, pushing to the side pedestrians like myself hiking the uphill cobblestone streets of the old Muslim quarter of Albayzin.

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Anar's business has boomed with regular help from his father's ministry, receiving exclusive government contracts, a near monopoly on Baku's taxi business and even a free fleet of autobuses.

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He rode in the “autobus,” the ragtag collection of sprinters and exhausted racers who band together and time their procession to finish just fast enough to avoid being eliminated from the Tour.

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At five o'clock he was taken to a hospital, having been run over by an autobus.

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The battalion is to be carried to the front in the same string of groaning autobuses which brought out its weary predecessors.

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