[OC] Monthly Enplaned Passengers, Hong Kong International Airport and Indianapolis International Airport, 2019-2022
Submitted by thexylom t3_zzjuck in dataisbeautiful
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'?
Emplaned sounds like an industry word, but maybe OP just made it up 🤷
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
Cool, I figured it was pretty standard outside of consumer interactions.
Enplaned! Enplaned!
So, that's what Tattoo was saying....
[removed]
Perhaps 'deplaned' is more common?
I hear that one on occasion.
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.
More so when used in tandem with “forcibly.”
It’s nice to have an equal number of both. Like “takeoffs” and “landings”
I have to imagine numbers skew at the edges, people die or are born on planes.
They use deplane on every flight though.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments