Not actually a shower thought, saw an old document that labeled it air-port. I don’t think I would have ever made the connection.
(I’ve found people can be rude about word breakdowns, but I’m posting it anyway. Be better.)
Not actually a shower thought, saw an old document that labeled it air-port. I don’t think I would have ever made the connection.
(I’ve found people can be rude about word breakdowns, but I’m posting it anyway. Be better.)
And why isn’t a train station called a rail port?
Missed opportunity to keep it all tidily labeled similarly, if you ask me.
Train station and bus station. Why isn’t it called boat station and plane station?
Because a station is a place you pull up to an leave going the same direction, and a port is a place you enter and then go back out the same way.
Airplanes come down to a port, then go back up.
Boats come into a port, then back out to sea.
Buses come into a station, then go along their way. Same as trains.
Buses come from a road and then go back to the same road, so this line of reasoning makes no sense.
The buses never leave the road. The station is on the road.
When buses pull into spaces, then back out, it’s called a bus port.
I don’t know what bus stations you’ve been to, but every bus station I’ve been to was something like an airport. Everything else has been a bus stop.
Don’t come here with logical arguments! :(
Hmm there is rail yard just like ship yard, though I think they’re used a little differently.
Funnily enough in Russian the word for train station is Vauxhall… spelt Russian. People say that Russian engineers studying in London mistook the name of a specific underground station - Vauxhall - as the generic word for station and imported it into their language before anyone realised the mistake.