Pumping useful heat out of the Tube
On 01/09/2019 12:44, MissRiaElaine wrote:
On 01/09/2019 10:57, Marland wrote:
So using the maps and what they are titled isn’t really a good indication
of what the network was popularly known as at any one time as saying “
I’m
going to take the London Electric Railways “ would be a bit of a
mouthful.”
My London relatives who were around from the 1920’s generally called
it the
UndergrounD and I of 1950’s
vintage** and generally still do.* Tube which has equally been around
since
the early 20th century since it it started as a catchy marketing title
was
generally thought to be the the deeper bored lines.
The distinction between the two seems have become blurred from about
the1970’s- 1980’s and has now become official.
The same period has seen many use Train Station instead of Railway
Station.,neither are wrong it is just the way* our language evolves .
I spent 15+ years working for British Rail, not British Trains. It will
always be a railway station as far as I'm concerned.
Train station is an Americanism. Next you'll be wanting me to drop the u
from colour, armour and similar words. No thanks.
Actually train station appears to be a tabloidism, railroad stations
and/or depots seem to be the preferred nomenclature across the pond.
--
Graeme Wall
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