Berkamin t1_j2d1oal wrote
Reply to comment by MitchMcConnellsJowls in [OC] Monthly Enplaned Passengers, Hong Kong International Airport and Indianapolis International Airport, 2019-2022 by thexylom
I have never heard the term 'enplaned' in my entire life, and I've been around for several decades. Don't they mean 'boarded' or 'on-boarded'?
miskathonic t1_j2d4hbu wrote
Emplaned sounds like an industry word, but maybe OP just made it up 🤷
thexylom OP t1_j2d4s4b wrote
It is an industry word, we used the same definition by the Indianapolis International Airport:
https://www.ind.com/about/investors-financials-reports/airline-activity-reports
miskathonic t1_j2d5tj9 wrote
Cool, I figured it was pretty standard outside of consumer interactions.
igor33 t1_j2ddsmj wrote
Enplaned! Enplaned!
rumblepony247 t1_j2dn0mi wrote
So, that's what Tattoo was saying....
[deleted] t1_j2ewxbz wrote
[removed]
wattro t1_j2dfrps wrote
Perhaps 'deplaned' is more common?
I hear that one on occasion.
rabbitlion t1_j2dj7c1 wrote
Deplaned is usually not used for passengers just getting off a plane though. Deplaning a passenger typically refers to throwing them off the plane before takeoff because they're behaving badly.
Blue-cheese-dressing t1_j2dmbfe wrote
More so when used in tandem with “forcibly.”
wrongwayup t1_j2dozer wrote
It’s nice to have an equal number of both. Like “takeoffs” and “landings”
markth_wi t1_j2dulsz wrote
I have to imagine numbers skew at the edges, people die or are born on planes.
kimchiMushrromBurger t1_j2dsd3y wrote
They use deplane on every flight though.
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