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Answer for the clue "Shuttle, perhaps ", 7 letters:
minibus

Alternative clues for the word minibus

Word definitions for minibus in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Minibus \Min"i*bus\, n. [L. minor less + -bus, as in omnibus.] A kind of light passenger vehicle, carrying four persons. A type of bus (omnibus) similar in general appearnace to a standard-sized bus, but smaller and having a smaller passenger capacity, ...

Usage examples of minibus.

First the minibus driver, who gave me the lamest directions on earth, then the kid behind the cash register of a convenience mart, and finally an old guy sitting outside a barber shop.

My first day, I climbed onto one of the minibuses that were used to shuttle fans from the several convention hotels to the main venue, only to find myself sitting next to Fritz Leiber.

The thirteen Republicans in a minibus had been waved through the gates of Buckingham Palace by smiling policemen.

She climbed into the crime scene bus, glancing back once to see the Changs climb into an INS minibus.

Concept of jeepney is impossible to convey fully here: a minibus, usually named after a pop star, Biblical figure, or abstract theological concept, whose engine & frame come from American, or Nipponese auto company but whose entire body, seats, upholstery, & encrustations of lurid decor are locally manufactured by high-spirited artisans.

He sent one of his men, Watkins, to bring round to the front the concealed minibus in which they had arrived.

Other passengers—some so untouched by the experience that they appeared freshly showered and dressed, others filthy and disheveled—stood alone or in small groups, waiting for the minibuses that would take them to the Dubuque terminal, chattering nervously or stunned into silence.

Then there's a lot of practical stuff about hiring the minibus from the hockey team, and putting up posters in the Student Union for anyone who wants to come along and support us.

There was no sign of life there, although other houses along the row had people going to and fro, being picked up in clearly marked company cars and minibusses, and from a few there were the sounds of radio and TV and stereos.

Far from the silver soccer balls, Rhyolite was a complex microwave receiver the size of a minibus with a large dish-shaped antenna pointed at earth.

The kamikaze motorcyclists tried to pick off the tourists and the small dogs, while the tiny minibus which we spent most of the evening in, shuttling our bags from one full hotel to another, hurtled through the motorcyclists and counterfeit watch sellers at video game speeds.

The traffic light changed, the battered little minibus moved forward, and no one paid them any attention at all.