It's curious how names change. I asked two young teenagers where the railway station was yesterday, as I'd taken a wrong turn. Blank looks. Then I asked where the train station was, 'It's over there'.
Is it me?? When did it stop being a railway station?
I think train station is American. Not that Americans take trains all that often, but they probably picked it up along with other Americanisms via TV or films.
oh, ok, Sqad. It was always railway station for me. I think that's on historical grounds, as that's what they were called when the railways were invented; but train station is fine on grounds of logic, as woofgang says.
Well, it has always been Railway Stations for me, but seeing I haven't been on a train, other than a steam train on a private line, for over 30 years, things may have changed!!
well, the railway doesn't stop at the station, the train does, but the train needs a railway and a station, it's a tough one for a Monday morning, I may have to find a song to help explain it
but of course, Lottie, one would nevah go on a PUBLIC railway, just too too infra dig! I only evah take private trains on the estates of landed gentry - usually just out to see the summer house or the orangerie at the far end of the estates, often in the next country but one.
<<No...it was called the "Train Station" when I was a kid..........years ago >> Would have thought it was called the Stagecoach Station or Coaching Inn that long ago......sqad.