Ask Yahoo!
Ask Home - Yahoo! - Help

 Ask Yahoo!
Thursday February 24, 2005 Previous | Next
Dear Yahoo!:
What distinguishes a street from a lane from a road from a boulevard, etc.?
David
Pasadena, California
Dear David:
We suspected the difference might just be semantics, so we went straight to the dictionary. Width and location seem to be the determining factors. Mr. Webster defines a road as an "open way for vehicles, persons, or animals" that generally lies outside an urban district, while a lane is "a narrow passageway between fences and hedges." The distinction seems clear to us.

The divergence between boulevard and street, however, is tougher to pinpoint -- the former is defined as "a broad, often landscaped thoroughfare," while the latter is "a thoroughfare especially in a city, town, or village that is wider than an alley or lane" and usually has sidewalks.

Since we've seen plenty of landscaped streets and boulevards with sidewalks, we decided to call for reference backup -- without much success. The Straight Dope claims the list of suffixes for naming streets has become so unwieldy that the U.S. Postal Service only requires the combination of name and suffix be unique.

Perhaps urban planners would be better served by turning to professional wordsmiths for help: Poet Patrick Kavanagh called a road "a mile of kingdom," while Emerson lamented that "the street is full of humiliations to the proud." On second thought, we'll stick with the dictionary.

 
Related Links
·Ask Y!: What is the significance of highway numbers?
·Famous Streets: Sunset Boulevard
More Questions About
·Words & Wordplay
·Yahoo! Answers - Words & Wordplay
Get Ask Your Way
·Most Popular
·Yahoo! Toolbar
· View RSS Feed  add to My Yahoo!
Email this page -    Save to del.icio.us    Save to My Web    Digg This

Copyright © 2005 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy

All information available through or in connection with Ask Yahoo! is informational only and provided "as is" without warranties, representations, or guarantees of any kind. Yahoo! disclaims any and all implied warranties respecting Ask Yahoo!. Use of Ask Yahoo! is entirely at your own risk and is not a substitute for conducting your own research.