Nomenclature
Abbey Road, London
There is a haphazard relationship, at best, between a thoroughfare’s function and its name. For example, London’s Abbey Road serves all the vital functions of a street, despite its name, and locals are more apt to refer to the “street” outside than the “road”. A desolate road in rural Montana, on the other hand, may bear a sign proclaiming it “Davidson Street”, but this does not make it a “street”.
In the United Kingdom many towns will refer to their main thoroughfare as the High Street (in the United States it would be called the Main Street -- however, occasionally “Main Street” in a city or town is a street other than the de facto main thoroughfare), and many of the ways leading off it will be named “Road” despite the urban setting. Thus the town’s so-called “Roads” will actually be more streetlike than a road.
Streets have existed for as long as humans have lived in permanent settlements. However, modern civilization in much of the New World developed around transportation provided by motor vehicles. In some parts of the English-speaking world, such as North America, many think of the street as a thoroughfare for vehicular traffic first and foremost. In this view, pedestrian traffic is incidental to the street’s purpose; a street consists of a thoroughfare running through the middle (in essence, a road), and may or may not have sidewalks along the sides.
In an even narrower sense, some may think of a street as only the vehicle-driven and parking part of the thoroughfare. Thus, sidewalks and tree lawns would not be thought of as part of the street. A mother may tell her toddlers “Don’t go out into the street, so you don’t get hit by a car.”
Among urban residents of the English-speaking world, the word appears to carry its original connotations (i.e. the facilitation of vehicular traffic as an incidental benefit). For instance, a New York Times writer lets casually slip the observation that automobile-laden Houston Street is “a street that can hardly be called 'street' anymore, transformed years ago into an eight-lane raceway that alternately resembles a Nascar event and a parking lot.” Published in the paper's Metro section, the article evidently presumes an audience with an innate grasp of the full urban role of the street. To the readers of the Metro section, vehicular traffic does not reinforce, but rather detracts from, the essential “street-ness” of a street.
At least one map has been made to illustrate the geography of naming conventions for thoroughfares; street, avenue, boulevard, circle, and other suffixes are contrasted against one another.
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