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The term bus plunge is an idiom referencing a journalistic practice of reporting bus accidents in short articles that describe the vehicle as "plunging" from a bridge or hillside road. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The phenomenon has been noted in The New York Times , which published many bus plunge stories from the 1950s through the 1980s, running about ...
In public transport, bus bunching, clumping, convoying, piggybacking or platooning is a phenomenon whereby two or more transit vehicles (such as buses or trains) that were scheduled at regular intervals along a common route instead bunch together and form a platoon.
A video shared by police in China shows the two brawling before the vehicle veers across the road and plunges from a bridge, all 15 on board feared dead.
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At least 10 Egyptian women and children died Tuesday when a small bus carrying about two dozen people slid off a ferry and plunged into the Nile River just outside Cairo, health authorities said.
To Lerner's point, investors have moved quickly this year to re-price stocks amid sky-high inflation and a Federal Reserve locked and loaded on interest rate hikes.
A run-off-road collision with a tree in Kreis Pinneberg, Germany in 2010. A roadway departure [1] [2] (also called roadway excursion or run-off-road collision) is a type of incident that occurs when a vehicle leaves the roadway.
Not quite a plunge, but a "decent plonk" nevertheless. Plunge: In the bookmakers' ring, a massive and sudden support for a horse. [6] Postilion: Jockey. Preliminary: The walk, canter or gallop by a horse on the way to the starting stalls. [2] Pre-post odds: A horse's anticipated odds as printed in the morning newspapers.