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Kevin
Can I also say "I had a transit in Hong Kong"? I have a question. Last month I traveled to India from Japan and had a connecting flight in Hong Kong on the way to India. In this case, can I say "I had a transit in Hong Kong"? Or I should say " I had a connceting flight in Hong Kong" instead? Thank you so much!
Feb 25, 2024 2:06 AM
Answers · 3
2
In US English, transit is only used as a verb, not a noun. This is why it is only correct to say ‘I had a connecting flight in Hong Kong on the way to India.’ And not ‘I had a transit in Hong Kong on the way to India.’
February 25, 2024
‘Transit’ has many noun meanings. It also has a meaning related to ‘connection’. I took a connecting flight in Hong Kong. I had a connection in Hong Kong. (This isn’t necessarily air travel but most likely would be perceived as such) To be ‘in transit’ means to briefly stop somewhere and then continue on the same plane. I was in transit in Hong Kong for half an hour on my way to India, but otherwise have never been to the city. (My plane landed there, then the same plane took off) As far as saying ‘I had a transit’ to describe the above scenario, I wouldn’t. I’d say ‘I had a stopover in Hong Kong’ instead.
February 26, 2024
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