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2006-10-27 20:10:18 · 18 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

18 answers

Neither. "I was sat on the bus" is a grammatically correct sentence meaning someone literally picked you up and put you down on the bus. It sounds strange since this situation would rarely happen. At least, I hope it would rarely happen... ;-)

2006-10-27 20:20:40 · answer #1 · answered by WonderingWanderer 3 · 1 0

Bad English

2006-10-28 03:17:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Bad English, dialects mean the different things. Like no money no problems in Jamacian is different than it is in America and England. There are some hints of dialects in different parts of America, but as yet Americans speak bad or broken english. Not different dialects, American English is a dialect.

2006-10-28 03:23:39 · answer #3 · answered by jadeaaustin 4 · 0 0

It could be a dialect but it's bad english.

2006-10-28 04:18:14 · answer #4 · answered by Kelli 5 · 0 0

Bad english.

2006-10-28 03:12:14 · answer #5 · answered by Harvie Ruth 5 · 2 0

Bad english.

2006-10-28 03:12:43 · answer #6 · answered by dundun286 2 · 2 0

Bad English, arguably dialect but so wasteful. Language is best compact. 'I sat on the bus.'

Peace...

2006-10-28 03:14:13 · answer #7 · answered by JVHawai'i 7 · 2 0

Sounds like somebody SAT your azz down for you!
Bad English...otherwise!
I was sitting on the bus.

2006-10-28 03:13:45 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

"I was sat on the bus" is bad english. When two verbs are used together, the first one is a helping verb; you wouldn't conjugate the two verbs the same way. The second verb would have to be conjugated into the present progressive tense.

"I was sitting on the bus."

2006-10-28 07:30:09 · answer #9 · answered by Sungchul 3 · 2 0

Definately bad english.

2006-10-28 05:25:47 · answer #10 · answered by TepG 2 · 2 0

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