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Do you hire a car or you rent a car?
All my life I used "rent" for this kind of situation, but is "hire" more popular in great britian? I'm not british, just studying the british variations of english.
8 Answers
- Anonymous6 months ago
Iza hires my car bossman.
- ?Lv 76 months ago
Here in the UK it’s been traditionally known as car hire.
But the American term car rental has also become very common indeed and is now used interchangeably.
I probably habitually type the search term “car rental” these days whenever I wish to hire a car.
Car hire is a term which is slowly becoming more associated with getting a chauffeured car service. Such as wedding or funeral car hire. Or those bloody awful stretch limo hire services which usually smell inside of spilt stale alcohol, puke, and cheap perfume...
- ?Lv 79 months ago
It depends on the activity.
If you are going to a care rental agency, like Hertz, Avis, Dollar etc., and no driver comes with the vehicle because you are the driver, then you are renting the car.
If you called a taxi, cab or "livery service", then you are hiring a care.
If you are using something like Uber, Lyft or any of those "not a cab, but a person is paid to pick you up and drop you off for a fee" companies, they are ride sharing (even though sharing has nothing to do with the business model), then that would be "ride sharing", "ride hailing" or any of a number of other "not a cab, but a person is paid to pick you up and drop you off for a fee" companies, then it seems you can call it whatever they want you to call it, except not a cab (or taxi) company.
- BillybeanLv 79 months ago
I would use rent a car.
Usually hiring something would involve the owner of it operating it.
Or you hire someone to clean your house.
Consider the word's use in "renting" a flat rather than "hiring" a flat. (Apartment to non-English speakers)
I do see that the term "Hire Car" is becoming more prevalent though, but it is an Americanism.