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Robboe Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

On board // on-board // onboard ??? english drives me nuts sometimes

hi there

spelling:

"we provide on-board courier services"

is on-board spelt on-board / on board / onboard in British English? Is there a difference in meaning at all?

thanks,

Robboe
  

Top answer

no difference, try not to let such little things drive you nuts! There is not total agreement about the hyphen issue, so you will see variations used.

  • no difference, try not to let such little things drive you nuts!
  • There is not total agreement about the hyphen issue, so you will see variations used.
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3 Answers
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no difference, try not to let such little things drive you nuts! There is not total agreement about the hyphen issue, so you will see variations used.
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What does this word mean? I couldn't find it in the dic.
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it means that something is located or provided on a plane or a car, for example.

eg.
car: My new car has an on-board navigation system.
plane: The new Airbus has sophisticated on-board entertainment systems.

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