[General] Shuttle drive? Car shuttle?

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Irina K.

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Hi everybody

I am looking for a short phrase to define the service of prividing a chauffeur to drive a car if the owner of the car is drunk or for some reason unable to drive himself/herself (it's a kind of taxi service). Is it OK to use the phrase "car shuttle" or "shuttle drive"? Is it understandable?

Thank you in advance


Irina
 

susiedqq

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Shuttle Service.
 

mykwyner

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In American English, we call a sober person who is doing the driving for a drunk person, or people, a designated driver.
 

BobK

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Shuttle Service.
That so :?: In the UK a shuttle service goes backwards and forwards between two fixed points - not unlike shuttle in a loom. Students may not know what this is.They (shuttles) move quite fast, so there hard to see while they're moving. You'll catch a glimpse of one going back and forth in this video, at about 2'23"-2'26": HowStuffWorks Videos "Industrial Revelations: Impact of the Loom"

We have 'designated drivers' in Br Eng too. Most pubs offer free soft drinks to the designated driver in a group.

Sometimes a hotel/sporting event/car mechanic will provide a 'courtesy car', but often there's no driver - the car's just a replacement. But the players at Wimbledon, for example, have courtesy cars.

b

PS There's a shot of a stationery shuttle in the same video at 0'06"
 
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JMurray

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Irina.
As in other countries the common term in Australia is "designated driver", the person in a group who agrees not to drink, but there are also several businesses offering the sort of service you describe, they have names like Dial-a-Driver and Co-Drivers. I might suggest (not very seriously) Teetotal Taxi – I just Googled this and found a reference to Muslim cabbies not allowing alcohol in their cars in Minnesota, and a 1960s taxi service in Ireland well known for carrying sailors back to their ship. It looks like the name is available. 8–)

not a teacher
 
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