Dead or AliveThe phrase "Dead or Alive" can refer to the following in addition to its common usage on bounties where it is a capture condition:
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The phrase "Dead or Alive" can refer to the following in addition to its common usage on bounties where it is a capture condition:. Coaches do not usually have these things. A popular 1980's Cross-dressing Soft Rock/Disco Band. Many have advertisements both in the interior and on the outside. For the Takashi Miike film, see Dead or Alive (film). Buses also either carry a conductor or else have a fare bin near the driver. For the Lupin the 3rd movie, see Dead or Alive (Lupin the 3rd). There are more and larger untinted windows for passengers both standing and sitting to watch for their stop, and devices to alert the driver for this purpose. DOA: Dead or Alive, a film loosely based on the video game. They often have both front and rear doors, which open in an accordion fashion. Dead or Alive (1996 game), the first game in the series. A bus also has the differences resulting from having to take on and discharge many passengers for very short runs. For the popular video game series, see Dead or Alive (video game series).
Thus most often coaches have upholstered seats, carry a toilet, and are air-conditioned. The main differences come from the facts that passengers of a motor coach are not considered potential vandals, and that a coach service is in competition with other means of long-distance travel. The term coach appears in the formal names of many such firms in the US, though most people still call them bus lines.. It is similar to a bus but usually more comfortable and designed for longer-distance travel or touring. In British English and Australian English, the term coach is also used to refer to a large motor vehicle for conveying passengers. In North America railway coaches are usually known as "railroad cars". A railway coach — also known, especially in the UK, as a railway carriage — is a vehicle designed for the conveyance of passengers by rail (the first such vehicles were, in fact, often road coaches mounted on frames equipped with railway wheels). The small Hungarian town of Kócs (pronounced "koach") was the place of manufacture, from the 15th century onwards, of an exceptionally well designed example of such a vehicle with durable and comfortable suspension and steering; and from the Hungarian word Kócsi (meaning "from Kócs") the name spread to several other European languages (compare Spanish coche and German Kutsche). The original meaning of the term coach was: a horse-drawn vehicle designed for the conveyance of more than one passenger — and of mail — and covered for protection from the elements. . |