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#11
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![]() On May 7, 6:49*pm, 1506 wrote: [snip] Moreover, it is not TfL's job to operate rail service accross Hertford County. What's a county in the American state of North Carolina got to do with this?! |
#12
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On May 8, 9:07*pm, Mizter T wrote:
On May 7, 6:49*pm, 1506 wrote: [snip] Moreover, it is not TfL's job to operate rail service accross Hertford County. What's a county in the American state of North Carolina got to do with this?! You know very well to which Hertford County I refer. |
#13
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![]() On May 8, 9:23*pm, 1506 wrote: On May 8, 9:07*pm, Mizter T wrote: On May 7, 6:49*pm, 1506 wrote: [snip] Moreover, it is not TfL's job to operate rail service accross Hertford County. What's a county in the American state of North Carolina got to do with this?! You know very well to which Hertford County I refer. But I don't know why you refer to it like that - this be Englandshire after all. |
#14
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On May 8, 9:33*pm, Mizter T wrote:
On May 8, 9:23*pm, 1506 wrote: On May 8, 9:07*pm, Mizter T wrote: On May 7, 6:49*pm, 1506 wrote: [snip] Moreover, it is not TfL's job to operate rail service accross Hertford County. What's a county in the American state of North Carolina got to do with this?! You know very well to which Hertford County I refer. But I don't know why you refer to it like that - this be Englandshire after all. Technically accurate, thought provoking, and appeals to one who mildly Aspergers. Why do our friends accross the Irish sea reverse the word order (e.g. County Carlow) I wonder? |
#15
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![]() "1506" wrote Why do our friends accross the Irish sea reverse the word order (e.g. County Carlow) I wonder? Not specifically Irish, but used where the county and a town in it have the same name, and the shire suffix doesn't apply. The one English example is County Durham. Peter |
#16
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On Mon, 9 May 2011 08:18:45 +0100
"Peter Masson" wrote: Not specifically Irish, but used where the county and a town in it have the same name, and the shire suffix doesn't apply. The one English example is County Durham. Not just counties - why Finchley Central instead of Central Finchley for example? B2003 |
#17
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On May 9, 9:47*am, wrote:
On Mon, 9 May 2011 08:18:45 +0100 "Peter Masson" wrote: Not specifically Irish, but used where the county and a town in it have the same name, and the shire suffix doesn't apply. The one English example is County Durham. Not just counties - why Finchley Central instead of Central Finchley for example? B2003 Well, I always assumed that it provides alphabetical grouping in documentation (and in modern web uses, drop-down lists), and would be very handy if all stations used that form: Acton Central, Acton East, Acton Mainline, Acton North, Acton South, Acton Town, Acton West ....but it was usually down to the original railway company to do the naming, hence the variations. |
#18
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Jamie Thompson wrote:
On May 9, 9:47*am, wrote: On Mon, 9 May 2011 08:18:45 +0100 "Peter Masson" wrote: Not specifically Irish, but used where the county and a town in it have the same name, and the shire suffix doesn't apply. The one English example is County Durham. Not just counties - why Finchley Central instead of Central Finchley for example? B2003 Well, I always assumed that it provides alphabetical grouping in documentation (and in modern web uses, drop-down lists), and would be very handy if all stations used that form: Acton Central, Acton East, Acton Mainline, Acton North, Acton South, Acton Town, Acton West ...but it was usually down to the original railway company to do the naming, hence the variations. Early usage was often to put the bit after the town name in brackets. E.g.: BIRMINGHAM (Snow Hill) because as far as each company was concerned, it was e.g. their BIRMINGHAM station. Once the system is integrated, the brackets are dropped. -- ..sig down for maintenance |
#19
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On May 9, 11:12*am, Jamie Thompson wrote:
On May 9, 9:47*am, wrote: On Mon, 9 May 2011 08:18:45 +0100 "Peter Masson" wrote: Not specifically Irish, but used where the county and a town in it have the same name, and the shire suffix doesn't apply. The one English example is County Durham. Not just counties - why Finchley Central instead of Central Finchley for example? B2003 Well, I always assumed that it provides alphabetical grouping in documentation (and in modern web uses, drop-down lists), and would be very handy if all stations used that form: Acton Central, Acton East, Acton Mainline, Acton North, Acton South, Acton Town, Acton West To a certain extent, I think that the usual convention may have been that it depended on whether the station was actually named after a place (for example, there are actually areas shown on the Ordnance Survey map, not just stations, called North Acton, South Acton, East Acton and West Acton), or whether the 'north' or 'central' or whatever was simply added by the railway company to distinguish it from other stations. Hence Finchley Central, because there isn't such a place as Central Finchley, it's just the central station for Finchley; as opposed to East Finchley, which is called that because there is actually a place called East Finchley. Then again, for all I know the areas of Acton may have taken their name from the railways stations, so that might be complete rubbish! ...but it was usually down to the original railway company to do the naming, hence the variations. I'm sure there's at least an element of that. Martin L |
#20
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![]() "Peter Masson" wrote: Not specifically Irish, but used where the county and a town in it have the same name, and the shire suffix doesn't apply. The one English example is County Durham. Durham was - until 1820 or so, I think, the County Palatine of Durham (the princes in question being the bishops of Durham). About 98% sure that's why the name has that form (it's many years since I spent time grubbling through 16th century correspondence in the Lit. and Phil. in Newcastle, but I'm pretty sure still that there were usages of "County Durham" explicitly as a short form for the full title in some of those - official - letters) Not sure that there were actually railways within the County until some years after the Civil Wars, though. Development was much faster north of the Tyne. -- From the Model M of Andy Breen, speaking only for himself |
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