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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Non nativespeaker having a question

107 replies

Flyingfish2019 · 27/11/2019 21:00

When I say “I am riding“ is clear that I am riding horse or could I also be riding a car or a motorcycle?

OP posts:
sellthesizzle · 27/11/2019 21:01

What's the context?

Simkin · 27/11/2019 21:01

I would assume a horse if no other context. But there must be other context!

NeutralJanet · 27/11/2019 21:02

I'd probably think horse first but I suppose a bike would also be a possibility.

yellowitsme · 27/11/2019 21:02

I would assume horse riding

lynzpynz · 27/11/2019 21:03

You can ride a horse, motorbike or a car. If would eliminate any doubt if you said you were going horseriding.

Unless you were an obvious keen biker however I would assume you were going horse riding if you said you were riding yes.

Cornishmum00 · 27/11/2019 21:03

I would think bicycle before horse

SemperIdem · 27/11/2019 21:04

I’d assume horse riding

Mattelio · 27/11/2019 21:04

I would probably think horse riding first but it would also make sense as a bike or a motor bike. Wouldn't make sense for a car though.

TheYear · 27/11/2019 21:04

You can’t ride a car.

You can ride a horse or a bike.

FavouriteSoul · 27/11/2019 21:04

Horseriding.

RuggerHug · 27/11/2019 21:05

If you're speaking to an Irish person it could be taken as you're having sex.

NataliaOsipova · 27/11/2019 21:05

Context is king! In the absence of any context, I would assume “riding” meant horse....but it could easily mean bike or motorcycle.

inwood · 27/11/2019 21:05

You could be shagging.

Flyingfish2019 · 27/11/2019 21:05

@sellthesizzle: In most languages I know of you DRIVE cars or motorcycles, and when you say you are riding it is always riding a horse... you cannot RIDE a motorcycle or bicycle in most languages but englishspeakers say they RIDE cars or motorcycles or busses.

So would it be clear what I had been doing if I say “I have been riding“

OP posts:
Yugi · 27/11/2019 21:05

I wouldn’t think of horse riding first, mainly because I don’t know anyone who rides horses.

daisypond · 27/11/2019 21:06

You cannot ride a car. You can ride a horse or motorbike or bicycle.

KnightError · 27/11/2019 21:07

Riding, to my mind, only ever means horses. If someone said 'horse-riding', I'd think they were a bit odd.

Flyingfish2019 · 27/11/2019 21:07

You confuse me now because some of you say I can ride a car and some of you say you cannot ride a car. Confused

OP posts:
KnightError · 27/11/2019 21:08

You definitely can't ride a car!

lynzpynz · 27/11/2019 21:08

You can go for a ride in a car, but you could ride a bike or a horse

Chesntoots · 27/11/2019 21:09

I would say horse, but when I first mentioned I've been riding to colleages, they assumed bike.

I guess it depends on whether you are wearing jods and have that lovely horsey aroma at the time...

daisypond · 27/11/2019 21:09

The expressions I’ve been riding or going riding only refer to horse riding.

Windmyonlyfriend · 27/11/2019 21:10

I agree that you don’t ride a car but you can definitely ride a bike!

froomeonthebroom · 27/11/2019 21:10

If you said "I am going riding" I would think horse riding.

If I asked you how you were getting somewhere and you replied "I am riding" I would probably think bike.

You can't ride a car but you can ride IN a car or ON the bus, but it would be unusual to hear that in England. You would drive a car, have a lift in a car or get the bus.

English is complicated!

Nicosia78 · 27/11/2019 21:10

You can’t ‘ride a car’ but you can ‘ride in a car’.