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streets and roads

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halfwit | 20:48 Wed 22nd Sep 2004 | Phrases & Sayings
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what is the difference between a street and a road?
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I didn't think there was a lot of difference but according to the Oxford dictonary experts a 'road' is a general term, whereas 'street' is narrower in sense and chiefly urban in application: a street typically has buildings on either side, and is paved or metalled!! Either way they look the same!! Hope this helps
Traditionally Roads led to somewhere (or used to), they sometimes still have names that reflect this (there is a London Road in Glasgow).....nowadays though there seems to be no difference.
And what about Ermine Street...the Saxon name for the Roman road that ran from London to York?
Did you know that the City of London has no streets or roads inside the suare mile.
I don't know London at all well, but I always understood that the Bank of England was called the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, at the very heart of the City. Isn't the bank within the square mile?
I work at Cannon Street, which is whitin the Square Mile. What about Lombard Street, Fenchurch Street, Liverpool Street and so on. Shaness, maybe you mean roads, as I can't think of any roads in the Square Mile.
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londonbarry is quite right.There are streets but no roads in the square mile.
Don't know but you say in the street and on the road, suggesting that a street is lined with houses and a road is a thing on its own. Thenb there is the thing in New York with streets and ways. Can't remember which ones i which but one of them goes north to south and the other goes east to west so no way can cross another way. And I believe Broadway is the only exception
Isn't Farringdon Road within the square mile? postcode is EC1M.
Watling street

a street is a road with houses along it. e.g. u wudnt say: i live on a road, but u wud say i live on a street. u wudnt say: i was travelling in the car down the treet, but u wud say: i was travelling down the road in a car (all, of course, depending on if u have a car!)

Yeah Bee -- You means Street and Avenues -- Avenues go north to south and Streets go East to West -- as 110th. street is the border of Harlem

Good Question this one. 

The answer to the question is "Not a great deal except, A Street is more often found in an Urban area than a Road and is more likely to be paved" and "A Road is less often found in an Urban area than a Street and less likely to be paved".   

The word Street ultimately derives from the Old Latin word strata means a paved road. The distionary definition is "A thoroughfare especially in a city, town, or village that is wider than an alley or lane and that usually includes sidewalks"

The word Road derives from the old English word Rad which means a ride/journey. The dictionary definition is "An open way for vehicles, persons, and animals; especially : one lying outside of an urban district"

Just to confuse the matter - in Preston you have Watling Street Road which is urban with houses on both sides.

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