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well i'm originally from the South and first moved to Sheffield in '78 where i found what i thought was a railway station is in fact a train station - thought this was fairly local use but just heard newsreader on the great and correct BBC use train station
Vote now! and tell us location/origin and if you rhyme scarf with giraffe
Train station/ Halifax
And its tea not dinner after work 😀
Train or Railway station, depends how I feel/Various
Scarf/Giraffe/Bath/Graph, all with a long a.
Oh, and one takes tea in the middle of the afternoon and dinner in the evening.
Bloody proles....
😉
Choo-Choo house.
I think you'll find that trains are stationed there not rails!
Southerners have a lot to learn......
C
Scarf/Giraffe/Bath/Graph, all with a long a.
Scarf - yes because there's a 'r' after the 'a'
The rest no, as there's no 'r'
[url= http://www.bl.uk/learning/langlit/sounds/regional-voices/phonological-variation/bathset-friends/ ]The BATH set[/url]
Reckon it's possibly more generational - older folk know it as a railway station, but it's becoming more common to say train station nowadays. Class might play a part, since middle classes are perhaps more likely to continue using inherited old-school language. I might be talking bollocks though.
Bath with a long "a" here too, except when I'm talking to someone who lives there in which case I use the short "a" to wind them up, or when referring to that team which plays rugby in the Rec...though usually in more insulting terms than just their team name.
I'm sure I call it a train and railway station in equal measure. Can't really work out which is correct.
EDIT: The only people who [i]really[/i] care what things are called are the various strata of the middle classes.
It must me train station - you wouldn't call a bus station a road station would you?
Railway station for me but, given my current lack of use of the greatest form of public traaaaaansport, I suspect I tend only to refer to it as the station.
The whole long "A" thing is an affectation started in the 18th century, where previously the flat "A" was the norm. However, other things have changed, too; for example, Hertford would have been pronouced "Hartford", hence Hartford, Connecticut being so called.
Of all the things Mike Ferrentino has written in Singletrack, the only useful and interesting article was the one in which he recommended "Mother Tongue" by Bill Bryson. It's very good.
recommended "Mother Tongue" by Bill Bryson. It's very good.
I would go so far as to say it's his best book.
Railway station.
They're never referred to as 'train stations' in the industry.
I would go so far as to say it's his best book.
As oppose to most of his books where he just moans about how crap everything is.
I live in the only region/county in mainland Britain without a Train/Railway station - so I wouldn't know.
Train journeys are a novelty to us.
.......oh and it's tea after work and dinner in the middle of the day.
As oppose to most of his books where he just moans about how crap everything is.
😆 Pretty much yeah. Or the books in which he is the one person in the world to whom something absolutely hilarious happens a dozen or so times a day. I mean I get an anecdote-worthy thing happening to me once every so often, but BB, no, it's just funny thing moment after moment.
.......oh and it's tea after work and dinner in the middle of the day.
If it's dinner in the middle of the day, please explain "brunch".
In chronological order:
Breakfast
Lunch
Low or afternoon tea (cake and sandwiches with the crusts removed)
High or meat tea (what northern types mean by "tea")
Dinner (though posh people will affect this as supper)
And kindly, when referring to the eighth letter of the alphabet, please do not aspirate its pronunciation. "Aitch" is clearly found in the dictionary. Under the letter "A", not "H".
Though it has its advantages, sometimes I do find The North(tm) exceedingly trying.
"Brunch"? no one uses that term around here so I can't explain.
I assume it's a meal between breakfast and lunch(which is known as dinner) "Lunch" is occasionally used by posh folk.
I supopose we could use the term "Brinner" ?
tiggs121 - Member
I live in the only region/county in mainland Britain without a Train/Railway station - so I wouldn't know.
Intrigued, where are you then? Rutland?