conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
wherein somebody sits on a twin bed, and for some reason the question asked itself: are mattress sizes the same in the UK, and do they have twin beds over there?

And the answer is no, no they don't!

So now I know, and you do too, and that about sums up what I know about the UK, so I'll also tell you something about NYC if you ever write something set here. I'll tell you two things.

First, of course, is that there are (virtually) no alleys in Manhattan. I don't care what you've seen on TV and in movies, you should hold yourself to a higher standard.

Secondly, wind patterns in Lower Manhattan before 9/11 were intense. Like, omg whoa. Those towers had one hell of an effect.

Thirdly, I can't count, and also, cashiers in the city can say "next", but more often ask the following customer to step down, which may be realized upon occasion as "following" or "step down" rather than "following (customer), please step down". This is something I didn't notice at all until somebody happened to mention it once on reddit, and immediately I was beset by the twin feelings of "wait, yeah, they do say that" and "hold on, that's not what they say everywhere!?"

Fourthly, I still can't count, and this may not be accurate to school today, but when I was a kid and when my mother was a kid, public schools in NYC spent time teaching students three chords on the piano - get ready, stand, sit down - so we could all stand and sit in unison at assembly. Mommy didn't realize it was not a universal practice until the first time she and my father went to a school thing in Brooklyn and he was left sitting after the entire audience of adults and students had stood up. And then he was left standing after they'd all sat down, having failed even the second time to recognize the musical cue.

Date: 2022-12-28 02:21 pm (UTC)
dewline: Highway Sign version of "Ottawa the City" Icon (city life)
From: [personal profile] dewline
When I lived in places as small as Selkirk and as large as Regina, I got used to alleys. Neighbourhoods of a certain age range in Regina had alleys. For a few decades - from the mid-1970's to the 2010's - they stopped doing that, but the habit's come back for newer developments from the maps and aerial/satellite photography of that city I've seen.

Ottawa doesn't seem to have gotten into that habit, except in a handful of specific neighbourhoods that built them as independent municipalities before being annexed into Ottawa.

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