taxi stand

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tulipflower

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Mar 4, 2014
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Persian
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Iran
Is taxi stand a place where people wait for a taxi as in a bus stop?
 
Is taxi stand a place where people wait for a taxi as in a bus stop?
Yes, but there's more to it. In some cities — Paris, for one — cabbies are not allowed to respond to someone hailing a cab. (This doesn't necessarily stop them. I once successfully hailed a cab in Paris, before I knew about the rule.) Clients go to the nearest taxi stand; cabbies know they can get fares there, so they either wait at popular ones or cruise past some, looking for people who are waiting. It's not a bad system once you understand it, as it matches cabs with customers while reducing congestion.
 
It is called a "taxi rank" or "cab rank" in the UK.
 
Note my corrections above.

I don't think the article is really necessary and it might help with taxi stand in quotes. And "as at a bus stop" would work.
 
Is a taxi stand a place where people wait for a taxi, [STRIKE]as in[/STRIKE] like a bus stop?
I don't think the article is really necessary and it might help with taxi stand in quotes. And "as at a bus stop" would work.
The indefinite article emsr2d2 added is necessary to make the question grammatical. Quotation marks are possible but not necessary.
 
The indefinite article emsr2d2 added is necessary to make the question grammatical. Quotation marks are possible but not necessary.

I based my response on the following:

A common noun is the generic name for a person, place, or thing (e.g. taxi stand) in a class or group. When common nouns are used in a very broad sense then we can omit the articles before them.
 
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