Tell me more ×
English Language & Usage Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I'm looking at apartment ads in Singapore, but I don't understand what pax means. Here's an example:

View 8pm today @ Hdb Approved HDB 1+1 Blk 3 Jalan Kukoh (Chin Swee Rd):

  • 15 min walk Chinatown MRT
  • furn with ac
  • avail 15th May
  • $1.5k max 5 pax
share|improve this question

5 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Essentially, pax means people/persons/occupants, as succinctly expressed by Callithumpian's answer (apparently it was used as early as the 40s; it became a standard term in the UK Passenger Transport industry in the 70s).

I worked in the bus industry for many years. Pax isn't exactly shorthand for Passengers. It's short for Passengers and Passes. In which context, Passengers is short for Paying Passengers.

The reason being that from a bus company's point of view it's crucial to distinguish between Passengers (who pay the fare when boarding), and Passes (using a Season Ticket, or some other pre-paid authorisation to travel).

In the UK, Local Authorities routinely pay for passes used by pensioners, for example. They may also pay a bus company a flat sum simply to run a Service that the company would otherwise have considered uneconomic. In such a context, the bus company needs to analyse Pax totals to ensure their buses aren't being overloaded, and Pass totals because the Local Authority wants to know their money was well spent. And they need (Paid) Passenger totals because those are the real 'customers' who might use a different bus company if they don't like the service or the price.

It may help to point out that one of the reasons for using Pax is simply to make report layouts easier. I was coding up those reports in the 70's, when things were a bit more constrained than today. Managers couldn't just run off a report when they wanted it; they got standard reports run overnight by computer operators.

These were often very long printouts, so page space was at a premium and columns were as narrow as could still fit the data in. Instead of a single column showing just 'traveller' totals, managers obviously wanted the breakdown. So we gave them Psg Pas Pax, being Paying Passengers, Pass Users, and Total Travellers.

Finally I've never actually seen pax used outside the transport industry, but it's worth pointing out that a dog, for example, probably wouldn't count as a pax, even if a fare was payable. That's because a dog doesn't occupy a seat. By the same token, a baby in a portable cot probably wouldn't count as a pax in an apartment, because it wouldn't occupy 'bed space'.

share|improve this answer
3  
So what do passengers and passes have to do with an apartment ad? Add that, and I'll upvote you. – KitFox Jun 29 '11 at 18:04
@Kit: I added my answer after Raena & kiamlaluno, because I happened to know how/why the bus industry use pax (having been working in that industry in the 70s). Until this question, I had no idea the term had spread further afield anyway. I doubt there's any connection except that some estate agent (read 'realtor', since I'm sure OP's example is US) assumed 'pax' could be used to mean 'people'. Note that on the buses, a dog isn't a 'pax' because it occupies no seat. In the apartment, a baby in a crib (not occupying a bed) would also not need to be counted, I'm sure. – FumbleFingers Jun 30 '11 at 19:09
But as your answer stands, it doesn't answer the question. It's just an extended comment. – KitFox Jun 30 '11 at 19:17
@Kit: oic. Yes, I'd have made a complete answer if I were doing it today, but back then I didn't really understand 'best practice' in EL&U. I'll edit it now... – FumbleFingers Jun 30 '11 at 19:33
In Thailand the usage of Pax has been extended beyond transport a lot. It is used whenever customers are concerned. Be it 4 pax for a spa, 3 pax dinner or in my own company we use 10 pax (attendees) for a wedding. It is used by both Thai speakers and English speakers. – Alendri Nov 26 '12 at 4:25
show 1 more comment

It means occupants, although I first heard it as shorthand for 'passengers' in the travel industry.

share|improve this answer

To add to Raena's explanation, it turns out that pax is a slang word for "passengers"... which would, in theory, explain why it's not in a lot of dictionaries.

share|improve this answer

As reported from the New Oxford American Dictionary, it means "a person" or "persons" (the plural of pax is still pax).
It is mainly used in commercial contexts, and its origin is 1970s, apparently as modification of pass-, from passenger.

share|improve this answer

It looks like PAX for passengers goes back at least to the 1940s in the airline industry. I found this clip from Air Facts: The Magazine for Pilots, 1946 (check):

http://books.google.com/books?ei=LGULTpmtEcXd0QGOtI1r&ct=result&id=mEQPAAAAIAAJ&dq=%22pax%22+%2Bcargo+-con+%2Bair+facts&q=pax#search_anchor

Here's the full text of the reference:

We have cargo and mail aboard. Mostly these days we run cargo east and passengers west. Cargo is known as "cargo", but passengers are called "pax" by the traffic department, who puts them on and takes them off the airplane and "bodies" by the crews who fly them.

share|improve this answer
You answer wasn't around when I did mine, or I wouldn't have bothered. I'm not going to delete mine now, after having spent time writing all that background, but you'll have to get my upvote! :) – FumbleFingers Jun 30 '11 at 19:51
@Fumble: Thanks. Regardless, your answer provides helpful background. If you could give a nod to my answer within yours, I'll return the upvote ;) – Callithumpian Jun 30 '11 at 20:46
Done. In general I approve of brevity here on EL&U, but Raena's answer was just a bit too brief for me at the time. I really do feel that sometimes a bit of background doesn't go amiss. – FumbleFingers Jun 30 '11 at 21:08

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.