What's the funniest road name you have ever come across?
@AllanDexter143 жыл бұрын
E
@shakingh4nd3 жыл бұрын
This street and that street. It was in nova scotia, and I came across it on google maps
@gabrielcolon89003 жыл бұрын
Bacon Street in Yorktown, VA
@Blackkray7773 жыл бұрын
Greg
@fixnbricks43903 жыл бұрын
Hanky Panky Street, Las Vegas
@fredsfreshbeats3 жыл бұрын
I walk a lonely road, on this large grand road with trees and vegetation on both sides of broken dreams...
@z-herb80063 жыл бұрын
You could say it’s the only one that I have ever known
@theBigtugeye3 жыл бұрын
@@z-herb8006 Perhaps I do not know where the road ends
@elettradelpin2303 жыл бұрын
assolutamente sì
@Zociety64773 жыл бұрын
@@theBigtugeye however, it's only me and I walk alone
@jwilder473 жыл бұрын
Around here, "Roads" are typically in rural areas, while "Streets" are more urban.
@xiphactinusaudax10453 жыл бұрын
around where I am, roads usually are long stretches while streets are just a catch-all term
@uknowngamer10173 жыл бұрын
That's how it is out here too!
@mihali96553 жыл бұрын
I live in Australia - and X Street often changes its name to X Road once it crosses the urban boundary.
@robertmiller97353 жыл бұрын
Yes, I'd consider the definition of "street" as "urban road", meaning avenue and boulevard are subsets of street.
@melonmard49953 жыл бұрын
@@mihali9655 i live melbourne, but i dont pay attention to the names
@Froge03 жыл бұрын
There's a road in my village called Bodacious Boulevard. Really out of place considering the rest of the roads have really normal names.
@xiphactinusaudax10453 жыл бұрын
According to Google Maps there are no Bodacious Boulevards, but there is a Bodacious Lane in a small town pretty close to where I live. EDIT: Nope, there's one in the UK, my bad, it didn't appear until I searched up Bodacious Boulevard (when I searched Bodacious there were only 2 results so I assumed that was it, I was wrong) EDIT: Okay, that also can't be it since there's a nearby street called "Dirty Lane" which is not a "really normal name." EDIT: There is also a Bodacious Court and a Bodacious Drive. These are all in completely different places, mind.
@Froge03 жыл бұрын
@@xiphactinusaudax1045 Yeah the UK one is in my village and Dirty Lane definitely well named. Driving my car down there after a car wash was genuinely the worst mistake of my life.
@brittakriep29383 жыл бұрын
Bodacious could be an anglification of Boudacia, a queen in time of Roman Empire.
@brittakriep29383 жыл бұрын
@Ben Shapiro : I am german . Perhaps 30 km north of my village was the borderline between Imperium Romanum and Germania Magna. Perhaps 60 km away is the town Aalen. In roman age there was the garrison of a large cavallry unit called , Ala', perhaps the reason for current town name.
@exmormonroverpaula23193 жыл бұрын
I've heard that part of the reason for the name "boulevard" is that when the wall of a walled town was torn down, a wide space was left surrounding the town. This wide space was usually filled with a road. This tended to be an important road, since it was wide and had access to the whole town. So "bulwark" (for wall) leads to "boulevard".
@csmlyly57363 жыл бұрын
Long story short, in English none of these words have any fixed definiton and are irrelevent to how a local municipality directs engineers to name their streets.
@johnspikes81023 жыл бұрын
I agree. this parallels the use of names for cities, towns, villages, etc., which are not assigned by population or other statistical premise.
@frenchys_prospecting3 жыл бұрын
Where I live the streets/roads are often named by the previous owner of the land. When an estate is drawn up the owner, then buyer get to name the thoroughfares
@jamesmacleod93823 жыл бұрын
George Carlin: Why do we drive on a Parkway and park in a Driveway?
@RayKnutson3 жыл бұрын
I was hoping you would include Crescent and Circle (both being curved, but a circle returning to the road it origniated from.)
@hammerheadduck2 жыл бұрын
Or a road that curves and then returns to said road. Like Francesco Circle In Capitola, California
@pedromenchik19613 жыл бұрын
interestingly, in Portuguese "estrada" (same etymology as street) means road, but "rua" (same etymology as road) means street ;)
@izziebon3 жыл бұрын
The ancient Egyptians were clever Gizas!
@BubbaJ183 жыл бұрын
Lol
@CieJe.Alexander3 жыл бұрын
Ba doom tchis 😄
@welshpete123 жыл бұрын
There is a road going across the desert in Egypt . That is wide as a Interstate with a wall on each side built by Alexander the great in about 320 BC. Which goes for many limes .
@musicsmith143 жыл бұрын
A simple one you missed is “drive.” I assume the intention of these roads is that you drive on them 😁
@macaroon_nuggets80083 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure they are roads that follow contours of the terrian.
@barvdw3 жыл бұрын
or the northern English 'gate', which has a Norse history (see the Swedish/Norwegian word gate for street, or gade in Danish.
@CieJe.Alexander3 жыл бұрын
Also; *Walk (lets go for a stroll/ride along the walk) probably short for walkway *Trail. *Track. *Rt. - Route. *FM - Farmer's Market(road)/Farm to Market(road) - important in U.S. rural South P.S. As I understand it: Avenue is closely connected with venue. As in, roads built along, or near, pleasant sites/scenery. To be enjoyed, and appreciated, as one goes. *see also; walk
@Markle2k3 жыл бұрын
@@barvdw A gade is a vej with buildings on it in a town. It will typically have a sidewalk and street lighting. A vej is a large pathway that leads from one place to another, whether worn into the terrain by vehicle traffic or purpose-built. From English, road translates to vej, and street translates to gade.
@Lawfair3 жыл бұрын
@@macaroon_nuggets8008 That makes a lot more sense, then my assumption as I tried to figure out what "drives" were were I live.
@scoutgaming737 Жыл бұрын
On the topic at the beginning, there is something in between a street and road It's called a stroad and it's terrible at being a street, because it causes a lot of air and noise pollution, terrible at being a road, because traffic goes slowly and terrible at being both because it causes a ton of accidents
@currypac3 жыл бұрын
There are lots of other “Ways” Footway : footpath Pathway : or simply path Walkway : Bikeway : Skate way : Breezeway : Roadway : way the road goes Gangway : path off a ship Millway : path that goes . past the old mill. Passway : road to get around, by . or through something Highway: high speed roadway Expressway : high speed roadway, no stop signs Tollway : pay as you go Skyway : elevated Highway Subway : road to go under, . often for light rail Spillway : Road for water to runoff Marine way : two meanings Milky Way: Road of stars in the sky Way of the Dragon : 🥷🏼 But what is origin of Midway : there are several uses in Chicago ie Midway Plaisance, which is a roadway through a Park of the same name Then there is a Henway What’s a Henweigh you ask? About three lbs 🐓 Of course there is The Way : which is the only road . to heaven 🕊
@JarosawPays3 жыл бұрын
5:27 I think there's something more to the wall-boulevard connection. When walls became ineffective against more modern military tactics, most european cities deconstructed their walls turning that new space into boulevards.
@Stormynormy423 жыл бұрын
Yeah, they had wide footprints, were usually already closely bordered by buildings on each side (so not much room for new construction), created a quick and easy way to circulate around the city, and created a definite demarcation between types of neighborhoods (similar to living on the "right/wrong" side of the railroad tracks in later times)
@dr.elvis.h.christ3 жыл бұрын
Where I'm from, "streets" and "avenues" have to do with north-south vs. east-west though they can switch depending on which county or city you are in.
@ericnorman52373 жыл бұрын
In my town, many streets that are cul-de-sacs are called “Place” such as “Marina Place.”
@Lawfair3 жыл бұрын
I was just thinking of mentioning that some thoroughfares where I live, are titled "place". However where I live, streets north of the "0" street, are numbered, while streets which run north and south are named; and when an additional road is needed between two blocks that is when titles like lane or place or road get used. So for instance if there is a road between 10th avenue and 11th avenue, it would be called 10th place, and if there was another road between 10th place and 11th avenue it would be called 10th road. While the north and south running roads are called streets, but if there is a road between "C" street and "D" street, it would be called "C" lane, and if another road exists between "C" lane and "D" street, it's called "C" way. And of course this must have taken a lot of intermunicipal planning a long time ago, but between every "Z" street (or lane or way) and every "A" street is either a boulevard or a parkway.
@SWLinPHX3 жыл бұрын
@@Lawfair That’s similar to the Phoenix metropolitan area, otherwise known as the Valley of the Sun. All roads running north and south on the east side of Central Avenue are numbered streets while on the west side they are numbered avenues. The roads going east and west are the named streets. But in between the avenues on the west you have drives and lanes and in between the streets on the east you have places and ways. So first Avenue, 1st lane, 1st Drive, 2nd Avenue, 2nd Lane, 2nd Drive, etc.
@Mishn03 жыл бұрын
There's one near Ticonderoga, New York called "Street Road". I always get a chuckle when I pass through there. I am easily amused.
@kamX-rz4uy3 жыл бұрын
There's one in the Philly area too. One of the first paved roads in the area so it was called a street road and the name stuck.
@pghrpg40653 жыл бұрын
@@kamX-rz4uy The name stuck, but probably the asphalt eventually did not.
@MichaelSidneyTimpson3 жыл бұрын
Actually I am surprized you forgot the most common residential Road name in the US: Drive.
@WeyounSix3 жыл бұрын
here in the US these have become mostly completely arbitrary tbh
@kazuhoshiinoue26953 жыл бұрын
Here in the Philippines, we have expressways - long stretch of roads that connect the capital city, Manila, with the north and south parts of the Luzon islands. These are the North Luzon and South Luzon Expressway (NLEX and SLEX, in short). Both expressways have northbound and southbound lanes.
@stephenmartinelli440310 ай бұрын
We also have expressways in california but only few of them the only street that has expressway is 65th St expressway
@arikwolf37773 жыл бұрын
The street in front of my house is call a "Grove".
@crispybaconnz3 жыл бұрын
Same here. There are also several Crescents, Drives and Places near me.
@michaelheliotis52793 жыл бұрын
@@crispybaconnz Crescent is used for semi-circular roads. Drive I believe is generally used for roads connecting to a housing cluster that is, or at least was, detached from a larger housing area, or ascending gradually up a large hill to an elevated housing area. Place is the most common name for a dead end road with a cul-de-sac. Grove is typically used for small residential roads that feature trees alongside.
@crispybaconnz3 жыл бұрын
@@michaelheliotis5279 Lol I've got examples near me that don't meet those definitions :-D guess our city planners were just making it up as they went
@peterw70123 жыл бұрын
I think a part 2 maybe in order, drive, parade, crescent, rise, place, square, junction, causeway, plaza, circle, circuit, mall, mews,
@kets44433 жыл бұрын
@@crispybaconnz there could have been a small group of trees on your Grove that got cut down
@mykytafil71603 жыл бұрын
Esplanade also has a meaning of flat land around a fortress. For example, in Kyiv we have Esplanade street near old fortress and it isn't close to water)
@Ceelbc Жыл бұрын
In Dutch the word Laan is sometimes used for a boulevard.
@PockASqueeno2 жыл бұрын
Don’t boulevards always have a median down the middle? The road I live on is called a “way,” which is indeed an offshoot of a major “boulevard” in the city, which has a large median, quite convenient for making U-turns. Not a lot of trees though.
@mikealexander19353 жыл бұрын
Here in Michigan a boulevard is a tree-lined street with a median strip that typically has vegetation on it. So its an wide avenue with a median.
@simplicitylost3 жыл бұрын
Yes, I thought boulevards were roads with vegetation in the median, not necessarily on the sides. (from Maryland)
@martalli3 жыл бұрын
While there might be history behind these names, in the US they are often used haphazardly. Streets are often used in American downtowns as numbered streets. Moline, Illinois uses this to an extreme, with steets running north-south and avenues running east-west (roughly parallel to the Mississippi there), with 1st steert anbd 1st avenue roughly at the north east corner and going to roughly 70th street and 75th avenue...
@_-KR-_3 жыл бұрын
0:12 Someone hasn't read the entirety of His Dark/Precious Materials trilogy
@Axillyriumm3 жыл бұрын
Cul-de-sacs are also known as circles. Also, there are Drives. I find these to be like lanes that have a dead end most of the time, without a circle at the end.
@musickfreak3 жыл бұрын
It's interesting where these names come from and what kinds of roads they originally described, but how these days names don't coincide with that anymore. Some still do, but for instance, the main road through my small town is 76 Country Boulevard. But there's an apartment complex behind the main shops on a quiet road called Scott Boulevard. They're both very different kinds of roads. Sometimes, I think people just name them based on what sounds more pleasant.
@ellermg3 жыл бұрын
me as french: hon hon, I already know the differences
@Euroflounder3 жыл бұрын
Hey, I'm not French and I already knew the difference.
@csmlyly57363 жыл бұрын
Frankly (hehe) as a colonialist-descended English speaker if the French insist on a particular interpretation that's exactly how I will never use the meanings of the word. Go back to Paris and choke on an academy.
@MisterInfinity243 жыл бұрын
@@csmlyly5736 Damn, you sound triggered.
@csmlyly57363 жыл бұрын
Ya think?, Mr. Infinity 24. Sounds about childish or even mindly racist. Definitely triggered a response from me. Mostly I just have an axe to grind.
@csmlyly57363 жыл бұрын
Oh noooooo a person living in their own native culture how awwwwwkwaaaaaard
@allenbooth51933 жыл бұрын
From 1978 to 2007, I lived on a street called Saint John Lane. There were several streets on the hill where I lived called Saint John, but with different designations.
@seanacameron89403 жыл бұрын
You are a delight !!!!!!! I lived on an ave., walked 30 blocked down a street to go to school. We had a traffic circle to go around, and in an area close to home there was a cul-de-sac. Never really thought about them until now. Bless your beautiful heart. Lots and lots of hugs with smiles to boot. The Canadian
@ilftm3 жыл бұрын
My favourites: Avenue Road (in Toronto) and Avenue Larue (in Québec City)
@pghrpg40653 жыл бұрын
I've seen the signs for Avenue Road; I always found that name to be interesting.
@PeterPeadar3 жыл бұрын
Just my thoughts: Boulevard is a thoroughfare with bidirectional traffic divided by a feature, generally vegetation. A Terrace is a geological term referring to the geological structure upon which the thoroughfare is built - sort of a plateau. See also Mesa. A Lane is a thoroughfare with no exit. A Way is a thoroughfare from a main thoroughfare to a lesser area. Alley is from the French “alleé” that means to go. Love, love, love your content.
@izziebon3 жыл бұрын
The meanings are revealed in the etymology; ROAD is ‘ride’... to get to another place (town); STREET is ‘paved’ so its within a town. Just to confuse matters, I used to live on Avenue Road!! (Bexleyheath... there’s also one in London city).
@anthonyberent46113 жыл бұрын
The old Roman roads (e.g. Wattling Street) are called streets wherever they are, so not all streets are in towns
@musicsmith143 жыл бұрын
There’s also an “Avenue Road” in Toronto where I’m from. It’s actually a main city street.
@DavidEndry3 жыл бұрын
Downtown Rochester, MN is a simple grid with Avenues running North/South and Streets East/West. On my first day of work at the Mayo Clinic, I jotted down that my car was parked at 6th & 5th. The town layout became very clear at the end of the day while searching from 5th Ave & 6th St NE, 6th Ave & 5th St NE, 6th Ave 5th St NW, 5th Ave 6th St NW, 5th Ave 6th St SW, 6th Ave 5th St SW, 6th Ave 5th St SE to my car at 6th Ave & 5th St SE.
@MrEricleblanc263 жыл бұрын
I tought what defined a boulevard was a separation in the middle, usually made of concrete.
@lindawolffkashmir27683 жыл бұрын
In my city, a boulevard will usually have an island or center division somewhere along its length. An avenue is wide, usually with parking on both sides. A street is narrower, and has parking along one side. A drive would be similar to a street.
@AlphaEta33 жыл бұрын
In Queens, New York you will often find areas that sequence 91st street, 91st rd, 91st place then it will be followed by 92nd street/road/place, etc
@danherman40813 жыл бұрын
And the Brighton streets in Brooklyn roughly follow that pattern. I recall there being a Tennis Court in Brooklyn, too.
@wendychavez53483 жыл бұрын
You have a new patron! I'm at a very low level right now, though as I further my writing career and use you to be sure my characters have names that support them I will probably express my gratitude more.
@ffortissimo3 жыл бұрын
In the Netherlands Napoleon had made roads between towns. The name of those are 'Rijksstraatweg' (Rijks = States/of the State, straat = street, weg = road (and not way in this case ;))). Most of them were indeed connecting roads, but over the years they have become streets within towns too. Another thing that goes around here is just no common name (road, street, etc.) at the end. Like names of colors of gemstones.
@AntoineLavoisier3 жыл бұрын
I’ve more than once entered an arcade in a new city only to find no games. I’ve also seen an arcade within an arcade. Very meta.
@cunningba3 жыл бұрын
A couple I notice are missing because there are examples i my neighborhood. First is Mews. Second is Circle, distinct from traffic circle, which is short street leaving one street in one place, meandering a while, then joining up to the same street later on, frequently with no other access.
@Lightman03593 жыл бұрын
In industrialized cities, Alleys serve another function: utility access, This can be seen in Chicago-s street plan where every block has a bisecting 1-lane road that is not named that runs behind the buildings that face the 2 flanking named streets. This alley is for garbage pickup and for access to garages for buildings that face a street too busy to safely have cars backing onto like Avenues which in Chicago are typically north-south 1.5 lane 2-way residential and light commercial streets [the extra lane on each side is for parking, busses, bikes and turn lanes. Boulevards in Chicago are typically up-sized Avenues with a median, 2.5 lanes in each direction and are fronted with commercial and industrial zoning.
@lostwizard3 жыл бұрын
On the avenues going north/south and streets east/west, that actually varies by town. In my part of the world, avenues typically run parallel to the main rail line and streets are perpendicular to it. That obviously assumes the railroad was there before the town started naming things. Likely other places have other schemes.
@Pining_for_the_fjords3 жыл бұрын
Another defining characteristic of boulevards is that they're often made of broken dreams.
@redapol56783 жыл бұрын
You walk a lonely road with that pun 🤣 (maybe not a pun? A reference?)
@thomasb56003 жыл бұрын
There are 4 major way used in Australia. Expressway = raised above ground Freeway = limited entry/exit major road. Motorway = tolled Freeway. Highway = major public road. Many roads original linked places but urbanization occurred.
@vuhdeem3 жыл бұрын
Where I live, the San Fernando Valley, Los Angeles, all the streets run east-west, and all the avenues run north-south. The major ones are named boulevard in any direction. Lane, terrace, place, circle, usually are short and narrow with dead ends. An alley is always unnamed, whether a car can fit or not.
@taurenelle66283 жыл бұрын
In cities, it's pretty common to have these road names in rapid succession. For example, between 74th Ave. and 75th Ave., you will have a 74th Road, then 74th Drive, then 74th Terrace, then 74th Place, before you get to 75th Avenue. And being that they are all within a 30 second walk from on another, the terrain doesn't change. So, sometimes these names are just used out of necessity.
@howardcitizen24713 жыл бұрын
That naming system seems to be mostly a Florida thing.
@tonymouannes3 жыл бұрын
@@howardcitizen2471 that's a US thing.
@Brook_tno3 жыл бұрын
You forgot Cresent, which from my experience tend to curve around and both ends connect with the same street
@Stormynormy423 жыл бұрын
I live on one of those, but they use Circle instead of Cresent, despite it being a horseshoe shape and not a circle of any sort lol
@tym116003 жыл бұрын
In Malay, Avenue = Lebuhraya Boulevard = Lebuhraya Highway = Lebuhraya Expressway = Lebuhraya Street = Lebuh
@matthewdrummond13403 жыл бұрын
My small ish hometown in Saskatchewan, Canada also has avenues going North/South and streets East/West.
@tinypenguinhk3 жыл бұрын
In my hometown we have roads called circuits (circular roads), crescents (half-circular roads), quadrants (quarter-circular roads), rows (can't figure that out), rises (slopes), closes (dead-end slopes), bazaars (per se), strands and praya (esplanades). Took me some time to figure those out. And yes my hometown is in the Anglosphere.
@_jeff65_3 жыл бұрын
In Ottawa we have a lot of "crescent". Which is really just a street that starts and ends on the same street.
@pghrpg40653 жыл бұрын
We have a street like that in Pittsburgh called Semicir Street.
@john.f.remedy.2372 жыл бұрын
And Stravenue. Known mainly in my home of Tucson, AZ - "runs diagonally between and intersects a Street and an Avenue"…
@weslabrash85936 ай бұрын
Where I come from streets run north/south and avenues east/west. Also common road types include Cove, crescent, place, drive, bay, view, green, heights, and rise.
@michaelhaywood82622 ай бұрын
The turning circle at the end of a cul de sac is sometimes called a banjo, presumably as it is the same shape as the instrument.
@_jeff65_3 жыл бұрын
In my hometown we have 3 types: avenues are North-South, streets are East-West, and boulevards are used as names for the major axis, they are also avenues or streets at the same time. IE "6th Avenue Boulevard Lacroix" is one road.
@VoidHalo3 жыл бұрын
Great idea for a video. I always had a rough idea of what some of the road names mean. Like a street is a smaller side road, or something, and a boulevard is that bit of grass between the sidewalk and the road, but I'm not sure what that has to do with the actual name of the road. In any case, I obviously haven't watched this yet, but I already know it's going to be awesomely enlightening. Thanks for making these! Cheers.
@davideldridge36863 жыл бұрын
Alleys in some towns are between the back of houses that have garages are usually no more than 1.5 cars wide. Often traffic is one way and are where garage cans and dumpsters are left for pickup. Many of these in the USA are remnants of neighborhoods that were built in the late 1800s and early 1900s where horses and carriage houses were parked. There is no vehicle access from the street in front of the houses to the garage in back and the houses are so close together and close to the street that a front facing garage would be impossible without removing and rebuilding the house or removing the neighbors.
@Blaqjaqshellaq3 жыл бұрын
I briefly lived on a street in Brighton, England, called Harrington Villas. PRIVATE EYE magazine published a photograph of a street sign saying "Thatcher Road: No Exit"!
@dansattah3 жыл бұрын
I was wondering if you would mention the "Autobahn" in this one. But I guess that one needs no introduction. :)
@Euroflounder3 жыл бұрын
It's german for "cars banned" right? Man, how ironic.
@dansattah3 жыл бұрын
@@Euroflounder You're confusing "die Bahn", which can mean "lane", "tram" or "train" with "der Bann" (the ban). Or did you try to reference something specific?
@fighterck62413 жыл бұрын
9:40. On the previous one, which I hadn't heard of before, I was thinking "wait isn't that a promenade?" Lol.
@bigbadspikey3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! This has been on my mind for the past few weeks.
@ronmaximilian69533 жыл бұрын
I always considered alleyway and Alley to be slightly different things. An alley is a private dead-end path next to a house, whereas an alleyway is a private path that leads to another street.
@howardcitizen24713 жыл бұрын
Your definition of alley sounds more like a driveway.
@ronmaximilian69533 жыл бұрын
@@howardcitizen2471 you're assuming that it leads to a garage, which it doesn't. I'm also thinking of something only large enough for pedestrians. It's simply a path between two houses that terminates with an obstruction like a wall or building.
@howardcitizen24713 жыл бұрын
@@ronmaximilian6953 In the U.S. at least, a driveway need not lead to a garage.
@franzfanz3 жыл бұрын
One of my favourite names is Waterloo Quadrant in Auckland. The early city ran parallel to the harbour and it was assumed that this would remain the case; so a grand plan was formed to build a government district on a hill above the valley which would eventually become Queen Street. This district would have consisted of four grand roads which would be called Quadrants. However the city then began to spread inland along Queen Street and Auckland lost its status as the capital so the plan was abandoned leaving only one of the four planned roads completed.
@Invalid-user13k2 жыл бұрын
Got to love how he started with a snake road. Where it looks like someone has been chasing a snake
@Kwauhn. Жыл бұрын
6:36 Fan Tan Alley in Victoria! Chinatown in Victoria is awesome, and a must-see if you're looking to take in some local culture & history. It took me a second, but I had a feeling when I saw that picture. I went there with my mom when I was younger, and that place is burned into my memory because we spent over an hour in that little alley looking at the shops haha. Also, great video. Your simple format and dedication to sourcing has really helped me with my little project. Thank you!
@kiga143 жыл бұрын
Why is "place" often used as the end of names for dead-end streets, especially in residential neighborhoods?
@CorwinAlexander3 жыл бұрын
Maybe because they don’t go anywhere, they are simply a place?
@ecenbt3 жыл бұрын
I would wager this is also tied to french and/or latin? as "square", so a large empty area is called a "place" or a "plaza" in latin languages
@RobsRedHotSpot3 жыл бұрын
An esplanade in English often refers to a route next to a body of water, but in French it's simply a flat area next to a prominent feature. For example in Paris, l'Esplanade des Invalides is a large open space by the Invalides hospital. These open spaces are often conceived to offer clear lines of sight on the feature in question. They are sometimes roads but also public squares and parks.
@robertwilloughby80503 жыл бұрын
My home street is an avenue. Doesn't have many trees on it, but there is a huge fir and an ivy covered hawthorn about halfway up - which is where I live!
@dtvjho3 жыл бұрын
3:18 The New York State Thruway (not Through-way!) Not mentioned: Pike (heavily used in PA and NJ- examples include Sumneytown Pike-PA73, Black Horse Pike-US322, White Horse Pike-US30, Philadelphia Pike, Baltimore Pike), Trail (Military Trail, Tamiami Trail, both in Fla)
@mihali96553 жыл бұрын
There’s a “High Street Road” somewhere in Melbourne, Australia’s eastern suburbs. Still have no idea about that one.
@martalli3 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't claim this is the origin, but in German towns, "Hochstrasse" (High Street) is typically the main commercial road, what we would think of as Main Street in America.
@RiazUddin-sk3uw3 жыл бұрын
Yah, in Glen Waverley. It’s crazy, parallel to “High St Rd” you’ve got “High St Rd Service Rd”.
@laurencefraser3 жыл бұрын
I would have expected it to be the road that lead to the high street. Certainly in New Zealand it's very common for older roads to be named after the destination . Though it's usually named for the Opposite end from the main hub, where applicable. Simply because more people would have reason to refer to it as such before the naming was formalized.
@HALberdier173 жыл бұрын
In my town we have two Avenues and they both run East to West. But they were probably called Avenues because they're the two major streets that run through the town.
@ralphbalfoort29093 жыл бұрын
There are at least two names of roads that you missed: Drive (which is what I live on) and Trace (where I used to live). We have Streets and Avenues that parallel each other, but are otherwise indistinguishable from each other in width or character. Some areas have streets with the same name, and are distinguished only by their type name, e.g., Adams Street and Adams Place. A friend of mine had his street renamed to avoid confusion with a disconnected street of the same name in the same village.
@chickadeestevenson54403 жыл бұрын
that's fan tan alley! IN MY TOWN!
@thoughtfulbobcat18723 жыл бұрын
In my home city streets run east and west and avenues run north and south. Which means we also have "stravenues" which run diagonally.
@gdhdi53393 жыл бұрын
I've been wondering about this for ages! This video did confuse me a little bit more. I do like the distinction from Sim City, where an 'avenue' is for one-way vehicle traffic, especially heavy vehicles, while a street is multi-directional but only suitable for light traffic including pedestrians. I also learned from somewhere before that 'promenades' are similar to 'parades', in that they are long, straight paths, primarily designed for a pleasing stroll. That's why they tend to only be in high-class urban areas.
@jonjanson22 жыл бұрын
Perfect outro. I am an American, I have never herd that saying about Ave. before. Atleast I think.
@marshallferron3 жыл бұрын
The way I see it a street tends to exist entirely within a city or town while a road either exists outside of town in a rural area or connects two or more cities or towns.
@ryancementheads3 жыл бұрын
I think new roads are named by how it sounds. I don’t think cities put that much thought into it anymore. We have one road that has 4 names as you drive, starts as a road, then changes into a drive, then changes back to road, then ends in an avenue.
@eggs4eggy2 жыл бұрын
where i used to live, the avenue i lived on, and the surrounding ones, had 0 trees and were 2 lanes, 1 lane for each flow of traffic, and barely used
@SWLinPHX3 жыл бұрын
In the Phoenix metropolitan area Avenues and Streets are parallel. They both run north and south but Central is in the middle and is “zero”- everything on the west are numbered avenues increasing the further you go west, and on the east of Central are numbered streets that also increase the further you go east. The entire Valley of the Sun is a giant grid. All the roads going east and west are named instead of numbered.
@ernestbywater4113 жыл бұрын
The best definition of the difference between a road and a street is a road is a thoroughfare that goes THROUGH the local area and at least one end of it is a good distance away while street is a local thoroughfare that has both ends in the the very local area. A classic example being the road is what goes from village A to village B while the streets are what comes off the road for the locals to use to get to their houses in the village.
@MeteorMark11 ай бұрын
Good memories on the promenade along The Wharf Road in Bridgetown, Barbados, you showed at 9:40😊 There is a self explanatory Boardwalk as well from Rockley Beach. Didn't know lane was from our Dutch "laan" (I live on one, indeed quiet and no through road) And boulevard from bolwerck, would never have guessed. Thanks forr all the explanations! Merci beau cul! 😉
@sixty26123 жыл бұрын
In my city there’s a couple “stravenues” which are short diagonal connectors between a street and avenue, unsurprisingly
@pghrpg40653 жыл бұрын
Interesting. I've never heard that one before.
@notroll12793 жыл бұрын
The picture you chose to illustrate the term "Boulevard" at 5:01 shows the Parisian "AVENUE der la Grande Armee" and its Western extension, the "AVENUE Charles der Gaulle", as seen from the Arc die Triomphe. I understand that in France, an Avenue is a big radial axis leading from outside to the current or previous city centre whereas a boulevard is usually built on a former city wall or similar defence and is therefore peripheral to the former city centre. And according to this logic, all the big tlroads leading to the Arc die Triomphe are Avenues, while some of the big axes crossing those Avenues are Boulevards.
@seaztheday44183 жыл бұрын
I feel Court, Crescent and Circuit are all similar types of roads that circle around on themselves, but in different ways, eg a Court would be more squarish/rectangular, Crescent would be curved like the crescent moon, and often intersects with another road twice to form a capital D, and a Circuit would be a full loop, but not necessarily circular
@j3ojos3 жыл бұрын
I live on a road ending in Gardens, I think the County Council chose that because they chucked a small green in the middle. Even more confusingly, it’s a cul-de-sac with three entrances, and no connections between the three entrances by road. I call all streets/road “road”, for example “cross the road at the traffic lights”, but I think that might just be a British/Commonwealth thing.
@mihali96553 жыл бұрын
Definitely a Commonwealth thing - we do the same in Australia.
@richardfurness75563 жыл бұрын
It's more likely a marketing strategy. If your road dates from the inter-war period the developers will have been keen to advertise the fact that some or all of the houses had back gardens rather than yards, a big selling point at the time.
@saraross83962 жыл бұрын
I don't know if my particular town has the directional street/avenue thing going on, however the one I live on is labeled "avenue" even though it is small, without any paint markings whatsoever, and dead ends. It does have trees.
@wildwoodspiderling30683 жыл бұрын
Then there's "crescent" which in my experience is a road which goes off of a more major road and then rejoins it again a short while later.
@scottandrewhutchins3 жыл бұрын
"Thrufare" is commonly used in NYC. In Queens, avenues are usually east to west. You should do one about Queens street names because it's really weird. In Indianapolis, there is a north-south street called Boulevard Place. In the Bronx, there is an Esplanade Avenue.
@frankhooper78713 жыл бұрын
Where I grew up, the word 'alley' referred to the unnamed roads between two residential streets giving access to garages. My godmother used to live in 'King's Close'...which was actually a through road and not a cul-de-sac. Did you know that [not that long ago] the road name and the road _type_ were joined to each other with a hyphen? So 'Oxford-street' or Alexandra-road'. I frequently see these in genealogical source documents.
@GranRey-03 жыл бұрын
To me in Vancouver BC: *Roads* can be any where it seems depending on the jurisdiction and tend to have a historic/name that describes it's location "River Rd" "Boundary Rd"...but in Richmond they have Roads for their major parallel ones "No.1 Road" - "No.7 Road" *Streets and Avenues* are just any road that is relatively straight and is in the grid pattern of the city. Usually if N-S roads are labeled "Street" then the E-W roads will be "Avenue". I live on a Street with trees planted regularly down it and the cross-street is an Avenue without trees planted, just the normal trees in peoples property. *Boulevards* are usually separated by their direction of traffic with a centre median and have trees and gardens planted in them. *Drives* are wiggly roads. *Crescents* are too, but they'll come back to the road you left if you follow them to the end. *Highways* are streets with a high speedlimit, *Freeways* are too but they have no traffic signals.
@benjaminstevens44683 жыл бұрын
I think thoroughfares and can even apply to railroads, or waterways, if they are regularly used for transportation and especially in the event that the waterway was such as canals that were already being used as a route of major transport. Any type of feature of the environment regularly, used for Transportation that can be followed to reach additional routes or ways of continuing travel. If it is the only way to reach all destinations beyond that point, it is not a thoroughfare. Most cul de sacs are not thoroughfares but if there is a bicycle or foot path beginning in the cul de sac, which leads to a main drag, it potentially is a thoroughfare, (unless the only other way to reach the cul de sac requires taking that same main drag. So even if there is a road, that leads to a lane, which has two lanes that you can turn onto and then each leads to a trail or two, if none of those trails reconnects to a another bit of the infrastructure, none of that network constitutes a thoroughfare.
@simplicitylost3 жыл бұрын
This type of video is right up my boulevard!
@ShonnMorris3 жыл бұрын
I think the names chosen vary regionally. In California, "street" can be any city road not a highway. Well, not quite. Some streets are also California State highway routes. Whereas boulevard and avenue are almost always busy streets. However, Berkeley, CA has a McGee Ave. which is not a busy street but a residential one. Road can also be used for a busy street and in San Diego two roads which would likely be called boulevards elsewhere are Friars Road and Mission Gorge Road. Then you have the "ways". There's Broadway which most large cities have that's all one word. Then there's Berkeley again which has ways that are two-word names; Dwight Way, Allston Way, Channing Way, etc. Then there are streets with no extra name after them at all. Berkeley has "The Alameda", that's it's name. San Diego has "Caminito Ruiz".
@SomethingBeautifulHandcrafts3 жыл бұрын
I always find the State routes the most confusing. Locals refer to the "road" by it's name, but others by it's state route. so while I may call it SOM Center Road, someone outside of the county might call it Route 91. I had to make the adjustment once I started driving around the state and using maps, because it doesn't show as the local name, but the State Rt.
@ShonnMorris3 жыл бұрын
@@SomethingBeautifulHandcrafts That's true too. Using another Bay Area example is CA state route 13. In Oakland, it is known as the Warren Freeway. The freeway ends in Berkeley and it becomes Ashby Ave. The whole thing, both freeway, and street are still CA 13 but an avenue in Berkeley and a freeway in Oakland.
@silverghini26293 жыл бұрын
In my local area we have Crescents which are roads in the shape of a half circle. We also have Meads which I believe derives from the word Meadow, I.e. built on a meadow.
@wimvermeer86063 жыл бұрын
I would like to give honourable mention to 'path' as general name for object we travel on (as opposed to road/street).
@davegreenlaw56543 жыл бұрын
Then there is Avenue Road here in Toronto. Try figuring that one out. Although one joke I've heard about it was that back in the early 1800's, two land surveyors were leaving a country pub near the corner of Bathurst St. and St. Clair Avenue - at the time *WAY* to the northwest of the small city that was then known as York. As they were trudging along the long way towards Yonge Street in order to get back down to the small city, one of them turns to the other and says, "You know wha' we need 'ere? We need to 'ave a new road." (It would make more sense if I drew a map, but I can't here.)
@TShah3 жыл бұрын
i live on an avenue that goes east-west, has no trees, and isn’t wide