Nachdem ich 2,5 Jahre in Lissabon gelebt habe, verstehe ich die Busetikette immer noch nicht. Ich habe meine Zeichnung eines „vollen Busses“ in Lissabon gepostet.
There is really no bus etiquette other than „avoid blocking the entrance and exit“ and „give way especially in priority seats“
Sardinha42 on
People can ask (Read as „stand up so I can seat or move over so I can sit in the empty seat.“) for a seat.
Dick1024 on
These are mostly my observations on the 723 from Marques de Pombal to CIF (Alges)
Slavatasca on
The people in the aisle seats must try to look their worst to avoid anyone sitting next to them.
Some prefer to eat greasy and smelly stuff and others just try to look like crazy people. Of course you should always put lot bags in the empty seat so it seems too much of a hassle.
Blitti3 on
This is so true. The back of the bus has always lots of standing seats and instead of people going there, they always concentrate on the entrances.
MoonInAries17 on
I just stand by the person and say „excuse me please“ and they’ll move away so I can take the empty seat
oh-pqp on
So people won’t get cold
always_somewhere_ on
If after 2.5 years you still need to make this post in English, I think you are worried about the wrong kind of etiquette.
notweirdatallll on
if you don’t like it you have alternatives.
Nuluo_ on
Odeio essa mania de bloquear assentos. Mano SENTA-TE AO LADO DA JANELA
cawabungapt on
I assure you that is not just a portuguese bus drawing.
ruyrybeyro on
Eu no bus não percebo é muitos velhinhos e grávidas frequentemente ignorarem a parte da frente do bus, e irem para a parte de trás para lhes darem lugares.
Betonkauwer on
The full-volume videocalls with no headphones happen in the back.
SILE3NCE on
There was hope once.
I’ll talk from the Oporto’s perspective, but the behavior is quite the same for the most part.
When the Metro started operating people were confused, but a few years in everyone talked about the etiquette.
* „When using escalators, if you don’t move stay right, if you’re in a hurry go through the left“
* „Give way for the people coming out of the Metro, once everyone is outside people can start go in“
The confusion started because people were afraid they would miss the metro, but after they realized the metro does wait for everyone to get inside they started to chill the fuck up and actually wait.
This didn’t last long. People started pushing their way in a few years later. I don’t know, for a while I had hope we would „japanize“ the whole public transport experience but I was wrong. We’re just lack the elegance perhaps.
BlueberryNeko_ on
I don’t like the back seats, nor standing there. But the standing area in the middle is there for a reason
PortusCalePT on
Não há, mas podemos começar a desenhar e a forçar a coisa.
l73vz on
Making all passengers enter through the front door is the real mistake. If there are other countries with the same rule, I’m curious how people manage inside narrow buses. And yes, people try to avoid walking in a WRC Lisbon bus while it’s moving.
9Sylvan5 on
It took more time you drawing this than it does to ask “ excuse me, may I sit here?“
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18 Kommentare
There is really no bus etiquette other than „avoid blocking the entrance and exit“ and „give way especially in priority seats“
People can ask (Read as „stand up so I can seat or move over so I can sit in the empty seat.“) for a seat.
These are mostly my observations on the 723 from Marques de Pombal to CIF (Alges)
The people in the aisle seats must try to look their worst to avoid anyone sitting next to them.
Some prefer to eat greasy and smelly stuff and others just try to look like crazy people. Of course you should always put lot bags in the empty seat so it seems too much of a hassle.
This is so true. The back of the bus has always lots of standing seats and instead of people going there, they always concentrate on the entrances.
I just stand by the person and say „excuse me please“ and they’ll move away so I can take the empty seat
So people won’t get cold
If after 2.5 years you still need to make this post in English, I think you are worried about the wrong kind of etiquette.
if you don’t like it you have alternatives.
Odeio essa mania de bloquear assentos. Mano SENTA-TE AO LADO DA JANELA
I assure you that is not just a portuguese bus drawing.
Eu no bus não percebo é muitos velhinhos e grávidas frequentemente ignorarem a parte da frente do bus, e irem para a parte de trás para lhes darem lugares.
The full-volume videocalls with no headphones happen in the back.
There was hope once.
I’ll talk from the Oporto’s perspective, but the behavior is quite the same for the most part.
When the Metro started operating people were confused, but a few years in everyone talked about the etiquette.
* „When using escalators, if you don’t move stay right, if you’re in a hurry go through the left“
* „Give way for the people coming out of the Metro, once everyone is outside people can start go in“
The confusion started because people were afraid they would miss the metro, but after they realized the metro does wait for everyone to get inside they started to chill the fuck up and actually wait.
This didn’t last long. People started pushing their way in a few years later. I don’t know, for a while I had hope we would „japanize“ the whole public transport experience but I was wrong. We’re just lack the elegance perhaps.
I don’t like the back seats, nor standing there. But the standing area in the middle is there for a reason
Não há, mas podemos começar a desenhar e a forçar a coisa.
Making all passengers enter through the front door is the real mistake. If there are other countries with the same rule, I’m curious how people manage inside narrow buses. And yes, people try to avoid walking in a WRC Lisbon bus while it’s moving.
It took more time you drawing this than it does to ask “ excuse me, may I sit here?“