in the front of the car but at the front of the train, plain?

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mrwroc

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Am I right?

I sat in the front of the car.

but

I sat at the front of the train.
I sat at the front of the plain.
 

Rover_KE

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If you mean 'plane', yes.
 

mrwroc

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I just found: "We asked to sit in the front of the plane."
My theory collapsed. Can I change the above sentence to: "We asked to sit at the front of the plane."?
 

jutfrank

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Your theory doesn't have to collapse under the feeble weight of one counterexample. The speaker ought to have used at in that sentence.
 
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