Why call a taxi when you can hail a Lyft to pick up visiting family and friends?
One of a Kind Gifts Are Only a Neighbor Away|Lawrence Ferber|December 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
He declined to award £30 to Miss Manners for her taxi journey but awarded her £10 travel expenses.
How A British Aristocrat Used Big Game Hunter’s Sperm To Get Pregnant Without His Permission|Tom Sykes|December 2, 2014|DAILY BEAST
This meant that Palestinian taxi drivers had to drive through the Israeli settlement of Bet El.
The Radicals Who Slaughtered a Synagogue|Creede Newton|November 19, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The driver then got on the highway and started going "well above the speed limit," with the taxi inspector still in tow.
The Ten Worst Uber Horror Stories|Olivia Nuzzi|November 19, 2014|DAILY BEAST
One of his first tasks will be to inquire fully into the charges against the taxi varlet.
Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 152, January 24, 1917|Various
Suddenly Isabelle called a taxi, and ordered the driver to hurry them home.
The Cricket|Marjorie Cooke
At eight o'clock she called a taxi and started to the first meeting.
The Dual Alliance|Marjorie Benton Cooke
He arrived by taxi, red-faced, fingering the butt of his holstered service automatic.
And Then the Town Took Off|Richard Wilson
The stillness, the absence of storm in the taxi was so unnatural that I began to miss it.
Once a Week|Alan Alexander Milne
British Dictionary definitions for taxi
taxi
/ (ˈtæksɪ) /
nounpluraltaxisortaxies
Also called: cab, taxicaba car, usually fitted with a taximeter, that may be hired, along with its driver, to carry passengers to any specified destination
verbtaxies, taxiing, taxyingortaxied
to cause (an aircraft) to move along the ground under its own power, esp before takeoff and after landing, or (of an aircraft) to move along the ground in this way