Does one “drive” a motorcycle or “ride” it?











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When you are the one steering the motorbike/motorcycle, are you driving the motorcycle, or riding the motorcycle?



I am asking because someone tried to correct my status update. Here's my status and the comment:




Today, after 6 years, I drove a motorcycle on a long route. Great Feeling. Loved it!



Comment: you don't drive a bicycle or motocycle... You ride a motorcycle... You drive a car...




Is that right?










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  • Related: Can “drive someone home” be used when the vehicle is a motorbike?
    – RegDwigнt
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:47










  • Just thought I'd add a 'side note' that while one would drive a car and ride a motorcycle, the experience of controlling a trike is so much more like a car than a bike that I'd call it 'driving a trike'.
    – Andrew Thompson
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:52






  • 1




    Looking at the American corpus, 'drive a motorcycle' has 5 hits, 'ride' has 26. Ride seems to be the more standard usage.
    – Adam
    Jun 23 '12 at 14:29















up vote
12
down vote

favorite












When you are the one steering the motorbike/motorcycle, are you driving the motorcycle, or riding the motorcycle?



I am asking because someone tried to correct my status update. Here's my status and the comment:




Today, after 6 years, I drove a motorcycle on a long route. Great Feeling. Loved it!



Comment: you don't drive a bicycle or motocycle... You ride a motorcycle... You drive a car...




Is that right?










share|improve this question
























  • Related: Can “drive someone home” be used when the vehicle is a motorbike?
    – RegDwigнt
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:47










  • Just thought I'd add a 'side note' that while one would drive a car and ride a motorcycle, the experience of controlling a trike is so much more like a car than a bike that I'd call it 'driving a trike'.
    – Andrew Thompson
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:52






  • 1




    Looking at the American corpus, 'drive a motorcycle' has 5 hits, 'ride' has 26. Ride seems to be the more standard usage.
    – Adam
    Jun 23 '12 at 14:29













up vote
12
down vote

favorite









up vote
12
down vote

favorite











When you are the one steering the motorbike/motorcycle, are you driving the motorcycle, or riding the motorcycle?



I am asking because someone tried to correct my status update. Here's my status and the comment:




Today, after 6 years, I drove a motorcycle on a long route. Great Feeling. Loved it!



Comment: you don't drive a bicycle or motocycle... You ride a motorcycle... You drive a car...




Is that right?










share|improve this question















When you are the one steering the motorbike/motorcycle, are you driving the motorcycle, or riding the motorcycle?



I am asking because someone tried to correct my status update. Here's my status and the comment:




Today, after 6 years, I drove a motorcycle on a long route. Great Feeling. Loved it!



Comment: you don't drive a bicycle or motocycle... You ride a motorcycle... You drive a car...




Is that right?







word-choice single-word-requests






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edited Feb 25 '13 at 13:00









Robusto

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127k28303513










asked Apr 14 '11 at 18:53









prometheuspk

175117




175117












  • Related: Can “drive someone home” be used when the vehicle is a motorbike?
    – RegDwigнt
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:47










  • Just thought I'd add a 'side note' that while one would drive a car and ride a motorcycle, the experience of controlling a trike is so much more like a car than a bike that I'd call it 'driving a trike'.
    – Andrew Thompson
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:52






  • 1




    Looking at the American corpus, 'drive a motorcycle' has 5 hits, 'ride' has 26. Ride seems to be the more standard usage.
    – Adam
    Jun 23 '12 at 14:29


















  • Related: Can “drive someone home” be used when the vehicle is a motorbike?
    – RegDwigнt
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:47










  • Just thought I'd add a 'side note' that while one would drive a car and ride a motorcycle, the experience of controlling a trike is so much more like a car than a bike that I'd call it 'driving a trike'.
    – Andrew Thompson
    Apr 15 '11 at 5:52






  • 1




    Looking at the American corpus, 'drive a motorcycle' has 5 hits, 'ride' has 26. Ride seems to be the more standard usage.
    – Adam
    Jun 23 '12 at 14:29
















Related: Can “drive someone home” be used when the vehicle is a motorbike?
– RegDwigнt
Apr 15 '11 at 5:47




Related: Can “drive someone home” be used when the vehicle is a motorbike?
– RegDwigнt
Apr 15 '11 at 5:47












Just thought I'd add a 'side note' that while one would drive a car and ride a motorcycle, the experience of controlling a trike is so much more like a car than a bike that I'd call it 'driving a trike'.
– Andrew Thompson
Apr 15 '11 at 5:52




Just thought I'd add a 'side note' that while one would drive a car and ride a motorcycle, the experience of controlling a trike is so much more like a car than a bike that I'd call it 'driving a trike'.
– Andrew Thompson
Apr 15 '11 at 5:52




1




1




Looking at the American corpus, 'drive a motorcycle' has 5 hits, 'ride' has 26. Ride seems to be the more standard usage.
– Adam
Jun 23 '12 at 14:29




Looking at the American corpus, 'drive a motorcycle' has 5 hits, 'ride' has 26. Ride seems to be the more standard usage.
– Adam
Jun 23 '12 at 14:29










7 Answers
7






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up vote
13
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accepted










If you are driving the motorcycle you are riding it. If you are on the back while someone else is driving it, you are riding on it.






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  • 1




    Hmmm... I would say the passenger is riding pillion and call the person riding the bike the rider.
    – z7sg Ѫ
    Apr 14 '11 at 21:24










  • +1 - But you could call out the difference more, I misread your answer the first time.
    – Nicole
    Apr 14 '11 at 23:09


















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The terminology is left over from the days before motorized conveyances, where to "drive" horses or cattle was to induce them to move in a desired direction. People "rode" horses by sitting on them. People "drove" carriages by inducing the horses pulling them to move. People "rode in" carriages or "rode on" wagons when they weren't the driver.



So now,




  • if something is a one-person mechanical conveyance you sit on, like a horse, you "ride" it.

  • if something looks more like a carriage than a horse, you "drive" it.

  • If something looks more like a carriage than a horse, and you are not controlling it, you "ride in" or "ride on" it (depending on whether you are inside or outside).


If elephants (which more than one person can ride) had been more common in England, we might "ride" rather than "drive" cars.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    7
    down vote













    Ride means, as reported by the NOAD and the OED, "sit on and control a bicycle or motorcycle for recreation or as a means of transport;" it also mean "sit on and control the movement of an animal, especially a horse."




    Diana went to watch him ride his horse.

    She rode a Harley Davidson across the U.S.







    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Technically, ride does not necessarily imply control as you can simply sit there and let something else do the controlling. But otherwise yeah, this is accurate.
      – MrHen
      Apr 14 '11 at 21:28






    • 3




      Ride does imply control if you are known to be alone on the conveyance (vehicle or animal).
      – msanford
      Apr 14 '11 at 23:48










    • Not necessarily. You can ride a bucking horse or ride a train. You can ride a roller coaster too.
      – Deonyi
      Mar 26 at 14:57


















    up vote
    6
    down vote













    A bike is ridden. Please see Google NGrams Viewer for some empirical evidence.



    I caution against using "drive motorcycle" as a search term because, while hugely prevalent, it refers not to the action but to the type of drive-train.



    Additionally: a horse is ridden when atop it but driven when behind it (as with a carriage or a plough horse).






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2




      The last para. is interesting to me, since it vaguely reflects my comment about trikes.
      – Andrew Thompson
      Apr 15 '11 at 5:54


















    up vote
    3
    down vote













    I would say ride/rode a motorcycle.

    Unless you were making a deliberate point about a car alternative = "I don't drive a car I drive a motorbike"






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      I would use "drive" to describe operating most machines or motorized vehicles. You can drive a car, bus, truck, motorcycle, tractor. "Ride" would be necessary for bicycles, horses, donkeys and very large dogs.



      That being said, the term "cattle drive" is a good example of the word's usage aside from the riding/driving meaning.






      share|improve this answer

















      • 1




        The reason one "rides" a motorcycle instead of "driving" it because of the seating position; in the case of bicycles and motorcycles, one sits astride them, as with horses, hence "ride."
        – The Raven
        Apr 14 '11 at 19:42






      • 1




        Sure, but you still drive a motorcycle.
        – MrHen
        Apr 14 '11 at 19:48






      • 2




        @The Raven: I don't understand the problem here: Google; NGram. "Ride" is significantly more common but "drive" works just fine.
        – MrHen
        Apr 14 '11 at 20:09








      • 1




        @Raven Really? What makes you say that?
        – HaL
        Apr 14 '11 at 20:15






      • 1




        @MrHen Well OK, you do have a point, and perhaps it is indeed acceptable in common usage, but it really grates for me! Certainly in the official literature they studiously avoid using the verb drive for motorcylists.
        – z7sg Ѫ
        Apr 14 '11 at 21:48


















      up vote
      0
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      I would say it depends on the context of what you are saying.



      If you need to state that



      there is something funny about the way he is riding the motorbike



      it is different than saying



      there is something funny about the way he is driving the motorbike



      or



      where riding indicates the activity of sitting on, and driving indicates the activity of pushing forwards.



      So... were you sitting on the motorbike whilst it was taking you for a ride? or were you pushing that motorbike around like a slave of your will?






      share|improve this answer




















        protected by RegDwigнt Jun 23 '12 at 11:58



        Thank you for your interest in this question.
        Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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        7 Answers
        7






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        7 Answers
        7






        active

        oldest

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        active

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        up vote
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        down vote



        accepted










        If you are driving the motorcycle you are riding it. If you are on the back while someone else is driving it, you are riding on it.






        share|improve this answer

















        • 1




          Hmmm... I would say the passenger is riding pillion and call the person riding the bike the rider.
          – z7sg Ѫ
          Apr 14 '11 at 21:24










        • +1 - But you could call out the difference more, I misread your answer the first time.
          – Nicole
          Apr 14 '11 at 23:09















        up vote
        13
        down vote



        accepted










        If you are driving the motorcycle you are riding it. If you are on the back while someone else is driving it, you are riding on it.






        share|improve this answer

















        • 1




          Hmmm... I would say the passenger is riding pillion and call the person riding the bike the rider.
          – z7sg Ѫ
          Apr 14 '11 at 21:24










        • +1 - But you could call out the difference more, I misread your answer the first time.
          – Nicole
          Apr 14 '11 at 23:09













        up vote
        13
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        13
        down vote



        accepted






        If you are driving the motorcycle you are riding it. If you are on the back while someone else is driving it, you are riding on it.






        share|improve this answer












        If you are driving the motorcycle you are riding it. If you are on the back while someone else is driving it, you are riding on it.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Apr 14 '11 at 18:57









        Robusto

        127k28303513




        127k28303513








        • 1




          Hmmm... I would say the passenger is riding pillion and call the person riding the bike the rider.
          – z7sg Ѫ
          Apr 14 '11 at 21:24










        • +1 - But you could call out the difference more, I misread your answer the first time.
          – Nicole
          Apr 14 '11 at 23:09














        • 1




          Hmmm... I would say the passenger is riding pillion and call the person riding the bike the rider.
          – z7sg Ѫ
          Apr 14 '11 at 21:24










        • +1 - But you could call out the difference more, I misread your answer the first time.
          – Nicole
          Apr 14 '11 at 23:09








        1




        1




        Hmmm... I would say the passenger is riding pillion and call the person riding the bike the rider.
        – z7sg Ѫ
        Apr 14 '11 at 21:24




        Hmmm... I would say the passenger is riding pillion and call the person riding the bike the rider.
        – z7sg Ѫ
        Apr 14 '11 at 21:24












        +1 - But you could call out the difference more, I misread your answer the first time.
        – Nicole
        Apr 14 '11 at 23:09




        +1 - But you could call out the difference more, I misread your answer the first time.
        – Nicole
        Apr 14 '11 at 23:09












        up vote
        15
        down vote













        The terminology is left over from the days before motorized conveyances, where to "drive" horses or cattle was to induce them to move in a desired direction. People "rode" horses by sitting on them. People "drove" carriages by inducing the horses pulling them to move. People "rode in" carriages or "rode on" wagons when they weren't the driver.



        So now,




        • if something is a one-person mechanical conveyance you sit on, like a horse, you "ride" it.

        • if something looks more like a carriage than a horse, you "drive" it.

        • If something looks more like a carriage than a horse, and you are not controlling it, you "ride in" or "ride on" it (depending on whether you are inside or outside).


        If elephants (which more than one person can ride) had been more common in England, we might "ride" rather than "drive" cars.






        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          15
          down vote













          The terminology is left over from the days before motorized conveyances, where to "drive" horses or cattle was to induce them to move in a desired direction. People "rode" horses by sitting on them. People "drove" carriages by inducing the horses pulling them to move. People "rode in" carriages or "rode on" wagons when they weren't the driver.



          So now,




          • if something is a one-person mechanical conveyance you sit on, like a horse, you "ride" it.

          • if something looks more like a carriage than a horse, you "drive" it.

          • If something looks more like a carriage than a horse, and you are not controlling it, you "ride in" or "ride on" it (depending on whether you are inside or outside).


          If elephants (which more than one person can ride) had been more common in England, we might "ride" rather than "drive" cars.






          share|improve this answer























            up vote
            15
            down vote










            up vote
            15
            down vote









            The terminology is left over from the days before motorized conveyances, where to "drive" horses or cattle was to induce them to move in a desired direction. People "rode" horses by sitting on them. People "drove" carriages by inducing the horses pulling them to move. People "rode in" carriages or "rode on" wagons when they weren't the driver.



            So now,




            • if something is a one-person mechanical conveyance you sit on, like a horse, you "ride" it.

            • if something looks more like a carriage than a horse, you "drive" it.

            • If something looks more like a carriage than a horse, and you are not controlling it, you "ride in" or "ride on" it (depending on whether you are inside or outside).


            If elephants (which more than one person can ride) had been more common in England, we might "ride" rather than "drive" cars.






            share|improve this answer












            The terminology is left over from the days before motorized conveyances, where to "drive" horses or cattle was to induce them to move in a desired direction. People "rode" horses by sitting on them. People "drove" carriages by inducing the horses pulling them to move. People "rode in" carriages or "rode on" wagons when they weren't the driver.



            So now,




            • if something is a one-person mechanical conveyance you sit on, like a horse, you "ride" it.

            • if something looks more like a carriage than a horse, you "drive" it.

            • If something looks more like a carriage than a horse, and you are not controlling it, you "ride in" or "ride on" it (depending on whether you are inside or outside).


            If elephants (which more than one person can ride) had been more common in England, we might "ride" rather than "drive" cars.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jun 24 '12 at 13:35









            Peter Shor

            61.5k5117220




            61.5k5117220






















                up vote
                7
                down vote













                Ride means, as reported by the NOAD and the OED, "sit on and control a bicycle or motorcycle for recreation or as a means of transport;" it also mean "sit on and control the movement of an animal, especially a horse."




                Diana went to watch him ride his horse.

                She rode a Harley Davidson across the U.S.







                share|improve this answer



















                • 1




                  Technically, ride does not necessarily imply control as you can simply sit there and let something else do the controlling. But otherwise yeah, this is accurate.
                  – MrHen
                  Apr 14 '11 at 21:28






                • 3




                  Ride does imply control if you are known to be alone on the conveyance (vehicle or animal).
                  – msanford
                  Apr 14 '11 at 23:48










                • Not necessarily. You can ride a bucking horse or ride a train. You can ride a roller coaster too.
                  – Deonyi
                  Mar 26 at 14:57















                up vote
                7
                down vote













                Ride means, as reported by the NOAD and the OED, "sit on and control a bicycle or motorcycle for recreation or as a means of transport;" it also mean "sit on and control the movement of an animal, especially a horse."




                Diana went to watch him ride his horse.

                She rode a Harley Davidson across the U.S.







                share|improve this answer



















                • 1




                  Technically, ride does not necessarily imply control as you can simply sit there and let something else do the controlling. But otherwise yeah, this is accurate.
                  – MrHen
                  Apr 14 '11 at 21:28






                • 3




                  Ride does imply control if you are known to be alone on the conveyance (vehicle or animal).
                  – msanford
                  Apr 14 '11 at 23:48










                • Not necessarily. You can ride a bucking horse or ride a train. You can ride a roller coaster too.
                  – Deonyi
                  Mar 26 at 14:57













                up vote
                7
                down vote










                up vote
                7
                down vote









                Ride means, as reported by the NOAD and the OED, "sit on and control a bicycle or motorcycle for recreation or as a means of transport;" it also mean "sit on and control the movement of an animal, especially a horse."




                Diana went to watch him ride his horse.

                She rode a Harley Davidson across the U.S.







                share|improve this answer














                Ride means, as reported by the NOAD and the OED, "sit on and control a bicycle or motorcycle for recreation or as a means of transport;" it also mean "sit on and control the movement of an animal, especially a horse."




                Diana went to watch him ride his horse.

                She rode a Harley Davidson across the U.S.








                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Apr 14 '11 at 21:46

























                answered Apr 14 '11 at 19:03









                kiamlaluno

                43.3k56180295




                43.3k56180295








                • 1




                  Technically, ride does not necessarily imply control as you can simply sit there and let something else do the controlling. But otherwise yeah, this is accurate.
                  – MrHen
                  Apr 14 '11 at 21:28






                • 3




                  Ride does imply control if you are known to be alone on the conveyance (vehicle or animal).
                  – msanford
                  Apr 14 '11 at 23:48










                • Not necessarily. You can ride a bucking horse or ride a train. You can ride a roller coaster too.
                  – Deonyi
                  Mar 26 at 14:57














                • 1




                  Technically, ride does not necessarily imply control as you can simply sit there and let something else do the controlling. But otherwise yeah, this is accurate.
                  – MrHen
                  Apr 14 '11 at 21:28






                • 3




                  Ride does imply control if you are known to be alone on the conveyance (vehicle or animal).
                  – msanford
                  Apr 14 '11 at 23:48










                • Not necessarily. You can ride a bucking horse or ride a train. You can ride a roller coaster too.
                  – Deonyi
                  Mar 26 at 14:57








                1




                1




                Technically, ride does not necessarily imply control as you can simply sit there and let something else do the controlling. But otherwise yeah, this is accurate.
                – MrHen
                Apr 14 '11 at 21:28




                Technically, ride does not necessarily imply control as you can simply sit there and let something else do the controlling. But otherwise yeah, this is accurate.
                – MrHen
                Apr 14 '11 at 21:28




                3




                3




                Ride does imply control if you are known to be alone on the conveyance (vehicle or animal).
                – msanford
                Apr 14 '11 at 23:48




                Ride does imply control if you are known to be alone on the conveyance (vehicle or animal).
                – msanford
                Apr 14 '11 at 23:48












                Not necessarily. You can ride a bucking horse or ride a train. You can ride a roller coaster too.
                – Deonyi
                Mar 26 at 14:57




                Not necessarily. You can ride a bucking horse or ride a train. You can ride a roller coaster too.
                – Deonyi
                Mar 26 at 14:57










                up vote
                6
                down vote













                A bike is ridden. Please see Google NGrams Viewer for some empirical evidence.



                I caution against using "drive motorcycle" as a search term because, while hugely prevalent, it refers not to the action but to the type of drive-train.



                Additionally: a horse is ridden when atop it but driven when behind it (as with a carriage or a plough horse).






                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  The last para. is interesting to me, since it vaguely reflects my comment about trikes.
                  – Andrew Thompson
                  Apr 15 '11 at 5:54















                up vote
                6
                down vote













                A bike is ridden. Please see Google NGrams Viewer for some empirical evidence.



                I caution against using "drive motorcycle" as a search term because, while hugely prevalent, it refers not to the action but to the type of drive-train.



                Additionally: a horse is ridden when atop it but driven when behind it (as with a carriage or a plough horse).






                share|improve this answer



















                • 2




                  The last para. is interesting to me, since it vaguely reflects my comment about trikes.
                  – Andrew Thompson
                  Apr 15 '11 at 5:54













                up vote
                6
                down vote










                up vote
                6
                down vote









                A bike is ridden. Please see Google NGrams Viewer for some empirical evidence.



                I caution against using "drive motorcycle" as a search term because, while hugely prevalent, it refers not to the action but to the type of drive-train.



                Additionally: a horse is ridden when atop it but driven when behind it (as with a carriage or a plough horse).






                share|improve this answer














                A bike is ridden. Please see Google NGrams Viewer for some empirical evidence.



                I caution against using "drive motorcycle" as a search term because, while hugely prevalent, it refers not to the action but to the type of drive-train.



                Additionally: a horse is ridden when atop it but driven when behind it (as with a carriage or a plough horse).







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Dec 7 at 4:18









                Laurel

                29.5k655104




                29.5k655104










                answered Apr 14 '11 at 23:54









                msanford

                1,0491915




                1,0491915








                • 2




                  The last para. is interesting to me, since it vaguely reflects my comment about trikes.
                  – Andrew Thompson
                  Apr 15 '11 at 5:54














                • 2




                  The last para. is interesting to me, since it vaguely reflects my comment about trikes.
                  – Andrew Thompson
                  Apr 15 '11 at 5:54








                2




                2




                The last para. is interesting to me, since it vaguely reflects my comment about trikes.
                – Andrew Thompson
                Apr 15 '11 at 5:54




                The last para. is interesting to me, since it vaguely reflects my comment about trikes.
                – Andrew Thompson
                Apr 15 '11 at 5:54










                up vote
                3
                down vote













                I would say ride/rode a motorcycle.

                Unless you were making a deliberate point about a car alternative = "I don't drive a car I drive a motorbike"






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  3
                  down vote













                  I would say ride/rode a motorcycle.

                  Unless you were making a deliberate point about a car alternative = "I don't drive a car I drive a motorbike"






                  share|improve this answer























                    up vote
                    3
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    3
                    down vote









                    I would say ride/rode a motorcycle.

                    Unless you were making a deliberate point about a car alternative = "I don't drive a car I drive a motorbike"






                    share|improve this answer












                    I would say ride/rode a motorcycle.

                    Unless you were making a deliberate point about a car alternative = "I don't drive a car I drive a motorbike"







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Apr 14 '11 at 18:55









                    mgb

                    21.9k23687




                    21.9k23687






















                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote













                        I would use "drive" to describe operating most machines or motorized vehicles. You can drive a car, bus, truck, motorcycle, tractor. "Ride" would be necessary for bicycles, horses, donkeys and very large dogs.



                        That being said, the term "cattle drive" is a good example of the word's usage aside from the riding/driving meaning.






                        share|improve this answer

















                        • 1




                          The reason one "rides" a motorcycle instead of "driving" it because of the seating position; in the case of bicycles and motorcycles, one sits astride them, as with horses, hence "ride."
                          – The Raven
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:42






                        • 1




                          Sure, but you still drive a motorcycle.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:48






                        • 2




                          @The Raven: I don't understand the problem here: Google; NGram. "Ride" is significantly more common but "drive" works just fine.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:09








                        • 1




                          @Raven Really? What makes you say that?
                          – HaL
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:15






                        • 1




                          @MrHen Well OK, you do have a point, and perhaps it is indeed acceptable in common usage, but it really grates for me! Certainly in the official literature they studiously avoid using the verb drive for motorcylists.
                          – z7sg Ѫ
                          Apr 14 '11 at 21:48















                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote













                        I would use "drive" to describe operating most machines or motorized vehicles. You can drive a car, bus, truck, motorcycle, tractor. "Ride" would be necessary for bicycles, horses, donkeys and very large dogs.



                        That being said, the term "cattle drive" is a good example of the word's usage aside from the riding/driving meaning.






                        share|improve this answer

















                        • 1




                          The reason one "rides" a motorcycle instead of "driving" it because of the seating position; in the case of bicycles and motorcycles, one sits astride them, as with horses, hence "ride."
                          – The Raven
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:42






                        • 1




                          Sure, but you still drive a motorcycle.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:48






                        • 2




                          @The Raven: I don't understand the problem here: Google; NGram. "Ride" is significantly more common but "drive" works just fine.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:09








                        • 1




                          @Raven Really? What makes you say that?
                          – HaL
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:15






                        • 1




                          @MrHen Well OK, you do have a point, and perhaps it is indeed acceptable in common usage, but it really grates for me! Certainly in the official literature they studiously avoid using the verb drive for motorcylists.
                          – z7sg Ѫ
                          Apr 14 '11 at 21:48













                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote










                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote









                        I would use "drive" to describe operating most machines or motorized vehicles. You can drive a car, bus, truck, motorcycle, tractor. "Ride" would be necessary for bicycles, horses, donkeys and very large dogs.



                        That being said, the term "cattle drive" is a good example of the word's usage aside from the riding/driving meaning.






                        share|improve this answer












                        I would use "drive" to describe operating most machines or motorized vehicles. You can drive a car, bus, truck, motorcycle, tractor. "Ride" would be necessary for bicycles, horses, donkeys and very large dogs.



                        That being said, the term "cattle drive" is a good example of the word's usage aside from the riding/driving meaning.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Apr 14 '11 at 19:03









                        MrHen

                        29.7k19105231




                        29.7k19105231








                        • 1




                          The reason one "rides" a motorcycle instead of "driving" it because of the seating position; in the case of bicycles and motorcycles, one sits astride them, as with horses, hence "ride."
                          – The Raven
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:42






                        • 1




                          Sure, but you still drive a motorcycle.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:48






                        • 2




                          @The Raven: I don't understand the problem here: Google; NGram. "Ride" is significantly more common but "drive" works just fine.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:09








                        • 1




                          @Raven Really? What makes you say that?
                          – HaL
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:15






                        • 1




                          @MrHen Well OK, you do have a point, and perhaps it is indeed acceptable in common usage, but it really grates for me! Certainly in the official literature they studiously avoid using the verb drive for motorcylists.
                          – z7sg Ѫ
                          Apr 14 '11 at 21:48














                        • 1




                          The reason one "rides" a motorcycle instead of "driving" it because of the seating position; in the case of bicycles and motorcycles, one sits astride them, as with horses, hence "ride."
                          – The Raven
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:42






                        • 1




                          Sure, but you still drive a motorcycle.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 19:48






                        • 2




                          @The Raven: I don't understand the problem here: Google; NGram. "Ride" is significantly more common but "drive" works just fine.
                          – MrHen
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:09








                        • 1




                          @Raven Really? What makes you say that?
                          – HaL
                          Apr 14 '11 at 20:15






                        • 1




                          @MrHen Well OK, you do have a point, and perhaps it is indeed acceptable in common usage, but it really grates for me! Certainly in the official literature they studiously avoid using the verb drive for motorcylists.
                          – z7sg Ѫ
                          Apr 14 '11 at 21:48








                        1




                        1




                        The reason one "rides" a motorcycle instead of "driving" it because of the seating position; in the case of bicycles and motorcycles, one sits astride them, as with horses, hence "ride."
                        – The Raven
                        Apr 14 '11 at 19:42




                        The reason one "rides" a motorcycle instead of "driving" it because of the seating position; in the case of bicycles and motorcycles, one sits astride them, as with horses, hence "ride."
                        – The Raven
                        Apr 14 '11 at 19:42




                        1




                        1




                        Sure, but you still drive a motorcycle.
                        – MrHen
                        Apr 14 '11 at 19:48




                        Sure, but you still drive a motorcycle.
                        – MrHen
                        Apr 14 '11 at 19:48




                        2




                        2




                        @The Raven: I don't understand the problem here: Google; NGram. "Ride" is significantly more common but "drive" works just fine.
                        – MrHen
                        Apr 14 '11 at 20:09






                        @The Raven: I don't understand the problem here: Google; NGram. "Ride" is significantly more common but "drive" works just fine.
                        – MrHen
                        Apr 14 '11 at 20:09






                        1




                        1




                        @Raven Really? What makes you say that?
                        – HaL
                        Apr 14 '11 at 20:15




                        @Raven Really? What makes you say that?
                        – HaL
                        Apr 14 '11 at 20:15




                        1




                        1




                        @MrHen Well OK, you do have a point, and perhaps it is indeed acceptable in common usage, but it really grates for me! Certainly in the official literature they studiously avoid using the verb drive for motorcylists.
                        – z7sg Ѫ
                        Apr 14 '11 at 21:48




                        @MrHen Well OK, you do have a point, and perhaps it is indeed acceptable in common usage, but it really grates for me! Certainly in the official literature they studiously avoid using the verb drive for motorcylists.
                        – z7sg Ѫ
                        Apr 14 '11 at 21:48










                        up vote
                        0
                        down vote













                        I would say it depends on the context of what you are saying.



                        If you need to state that



                        there is something funny about the way he is riding the motorbike



                        it is different than saying



                        there is something funny about the way he is driving the motorbike



                        or



                        where riding indicates the activity of sitting on, and driving indicates the activity of pushing forwards.



                        So... were you sitting on the motorbike whilst it was taking you for a ride? or were you pushing that motorbike around like a slave of your will?






                        share|improve this answer

























                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          I would say it depends on the context of what you are saying.



                          If you need to state that



                          there is something funny about the way he is riding the motorbike



                          it is different than saying



                          there is something funny about the way he is driving the motorbike



                          or



                          where riding indicates the activity of sitting on, and driving indicates the activity of pushing forwards.



                          So... were you sitting on the motorbike whilst it was taking you for a ride? or were you pushing that motorbike around like a slave of your will?






                          share|improve this answer























                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote









                            I would say it depends on the context of what you are saying.



                            If you need to state that



                            there is something funny about the way he is riding the motorbike



                            it is different than saying



                            there is something funny about the way he is driving the motorbike



                            or



                            where riding indicates the activity of sitting on, and driving indicates the activity of pushing forwards.



                            So... were you sitting on the motorbike whilst it was taking you for a ride? or were you pushing that motorbike around like a slave of your will?






                            share|improve this answer












                            I would say it depends on the context of what you are saying.



                            If you need to state that



                            there is something funny about the way he is riding the motorbike



                            it is different than saying



                            there is something funny about the way he is driving the motorbike



                            or



                            where riding indicates the activity of sitting on, and driving indicates the activity of pushing forwards.



                            So... were you sitting on the motorbike whilst it was taking you for a ride? or were you pushing that motorbike around like a slave of your will?







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Apr 14 '11 at 22:22









                            Billy Moon

                            306111




                            306111

















                                protected by RegDwigнt Jun 23 '12 at 11:58



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