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What does commuting mean?

Girls who like online shopping should have seen commuter clothes, so what does this commute mean? Let's talk about the significance of commuting in detail.

Commuting is Japanese Chinese, which refers to the process of commuting from home to work. Generally speaking, commuting is a popular word in Japanese, but it is a railway term in Chinese. Commuting is an inevitable phenomenon in industrialized society.

Commuting is Japanese Chinese, which refers to the process of commuting from home to work. Generally speaking, commuting is a popular word in Japanese, but it is a railway term in Chinese. Commuting is an inevitable phenomenon in industrialized society. /kloc-before the 0 th and 9 th centuries, citizens mainly walked to work. At present, cars, trains, buses and bicycles can make people who live far away go to work quickly.

With the progress of transportation technology, cities can expand to places that were impossible before. The establishment of suburbs also enables citizens to live far away from urban areas and commute to work. Many big cities have so-called commuting areas, or metropolitan areas. Such areas include many commuter cities. People live in commuting cities and work in the city center.

If the city extends far away from the central business district, new businesses will appear in the peripheral cities, thus forming a reverse commuting phenomenon: people living in the city center go to work in the suburbs. Commuting brings a lot of trouble to the city. Traffic congestion and new urban development will do harm to the environment.

The word commuting should be used in the railway system at the earliest. Until now, the railway system is still called commuting for employees in different places. However, this word is rarely used in other industries in society. From the origin, "Commuting" is an exotic product, which is directly quoted from the Japanese character "Commuting (つぅきん)". As we all know, before liberation, most railways in China were controlled by the Japanese, and the management system, technical standards and technical terms of railway companies were directly written in Japanese. Some words have been used since liberation, such as "commuting" and "going up and down", which are generally only used within the railway system in China, but these are popular words in Japan.

Commuter wear generally refers to the kind of clothing that can be worn at the same time for work, study, leisure or entertainment, and is not limited to a specific occasion. It can also be called wild clothes. Unlike pajamas (only worn at home) and professional clothes (worn at work).