Unit 1: English In A Minute
Give us a minute and we'll teach you English
Session 40
Welcome to English In A Minute. Give us a minute and we'll give you a hot tip about English. Grammar, vocabulary... there's so much to learn! And all taught by your favourite BBC Learning English staff!
Wayiitiwwan marii boqonnaa kana keessaa
Wayitii marii qabxii 40
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- 0 / 3Activity 1
Activity 1
Journey and trip
Do you have a minute to spare to learn some English? Sian explains why we use journey and trip. Give us 60 seconds and we'll give you the English!
Vidiyoo daawwadhuuti shaakala kana xumuri

Sian
Hi! Sian here again! Now, we all love going on holiday, but these two words can cause problems.
So a journey is a noun and refers to a single piece of travel - so, when you move from one place to another by car, plane, train, bus. The journey to London takes three hours by bus.
A trip is also a noun, but usually refers to more than one journey and the time you spend in a place. So, if someone asks 'How was your trip?' they're asking about the whole time you are away, not the journey.
Phil
How was your camping trip, Sian?
Sian
It was fun, but it rained all weekend!
A trip is often quite short compared to a holiday, and we can use it in these set phrases. So you can have a business trip, a school trip or a day trip.
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Did you like that? Why not try these?
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Learn more about travel and transport
Journey and trip
Journey
Journey is a noun. It refers to a single piece of travel i.e. one period of movement from one place to another by car, plane, train etc.
- The journey to London takes three hours by bus.
- Before the car, journeys used to take much longer.
- It's been a long journey but we're finally here!
Trip
Trip is a noun. It usually refers to more than one journey and the time spent somewhere. If you travel for a day to a hotel, stay three days and travel for one day home again, then your trip was five days.
- How was your camping trip, Sian?
- It's been quite the trip, but I'm glad to be home.
- Next week, I'm going on a short trip to France. I'll be away for six days.
Trip is also often used in several set phrases: a business trip, a school trip and a day trip.
- Mr Johnson is away on a business trip in Germany. Can I take a message?
- Please get your permission slips signed if you want to come on the school trip to the zoo.
- Shall we take a day trip to the beach today?
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To do
Try our quiz to see how well you've learned today's language.
English In A Minute Quiz
3 Questions
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
Gargaarsa
Activity
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
karaarra buusu
Are we talking about 'one piece of travel' or 'several pieces of travel and time spent staying somewhere'?Question 1 of 3
Gargaarsa
Activity
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
karaarra buusu
Use the second sentence to understand what the person means by 'journey' or 'trip'.Question 2 of 3
Gargaarsa
Activity
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
karaarra buusu
Which of these seems unlikely to be a regular trip that people take?Question 3 of 3
Excellent!Great job!Carraa badaa!Qabxii argatte:
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