Non-motoring > Whre's this? Miscellaneous
Thread Author: Enoughalready Replies: 27

 Whre's this? - Enoughalready
I have a desktop background that changes as a slideshow. Windows 7 came with various picture packs one of which is called United Kingdom.

I know most of the places but where is this? I'm guessing Scotland?
tinyurl.com/lu5fdzs
 Whre's this? - martin aston
Its Dunnottar Castle juts outside Stonehaven, a small coastal town south of Aberdeen. Beautiful location and a substantial ruin. I recommend a visit if you are ever in the area.
 Whre's this? - Enoughalready
Thanks Martin. Another one for the bucket list.
 Whre's this? - No FM2R
www.dunnottarcastle.co.uk/
 Whre's this? - No FM2R
Darn, pipped.
 Whre's this? - Enoughalready
Looks fabulous. I never get up to Scotland, must make more effort.
 Whre's this? - Cliff Pope
>> I never get up to Scotland,
>>

Isn't that an anglocentric way of looking at a nearly-independent nation?
Geographers are riddled with institutionalised direction-prejudice. :)
 Whre's this? - Enoughalready
You're correct of course. I'll have to think of that whenever I intend to go down north ;)

However, everything above Watford is up.
Last edited by: Enoughalready on Tue 13 May 14 at 11:51
 Whre's this? - CGNorwich
It's alway "up" to London wherever you are.
 Whre's this? - Bromptonaut
>> It's alway "up" to London wherever you are.

Only if you travel by rail.
 Whre's this? - Crankcase
"Down" to London for me, but "up" to Scotland, and "over" to Wales. Purely north south map thing in my head.

Don't know how I'd have got on in ancient Egypt though, where they put south at the top of their maps.
Last edited by: Crankcase on Tue 13 May 14 at 12:01
 Whre's this? - sooty123
>> It's alway "up" to London wherever you are.
>>

Could you explain that? For those abit slow on the uptake.
Last edited by: sooty123 on Tue 13 May 14 at 12:16
 Whre's this? - Bromptonaut
>> Could you explain that? For those abit slow on the uptake.

One answer is that travelling by rail to London the 'Up' line is always London bound while opposite direction is 'down'.
 Whre's this? - Ambo
"Up to London" is a class locution except that we usually say "Up to Town".
 Whre's this? - sooty123
Ah, a train term. Thanks.
 Whre's this? - CGNorwich
I think that may where it originated but common usage was certainly "going up to London" wherever you were in in the country. Things change of course and that may no longer be the case although I would always go "up to London" from Norwich however I was travelling.
 Whre's this? - sooty123
Not sure about common usage can't say I've heard of that phrase before. Perhaps like you say, a phrase more common in the past?
 Whre's this? - Crankcase
My wife's family and Mrs C herself always say "up to London".

Thus, in a kind of Heraclitian mode, we can travel on the same train which is going both up and down to London at the same time.
 Whre's this? - Gromit
Many folk in this part of Ireland go "up to Cork", "up to Donegal" and "up to Dublin" - even though they're in different directions (due south, north and east respectively!)
 Whre's this? - Dog
Everywhere is 'up' from Cornwall, as in up country.
 Whre's this? - Fenlander
Down to London in this household... mind you I've heard London is a place south of Biggleswade so perhaps an appropriate description.
 Whre's this? - Gromit
At least there's some logic to that - you couldn't go too far down country from Cornwall before running out of land :-)
 Whre's this? - Armel Coussine
Up to London from the South and West, down to London from everywhere else.

Stands to reason. North is up and south is down innit?
 Whre's this? - Roger.
Yes.
 Whre's this? - CGNorwich
At the end of the day of course neither up or down is necessary. You just go to London.

 Whre's this? - Bromptonaut
>> At the end of the day of course neither up or down is necessary. You
>> just go to London.
>

Or in Leicestershire just "I'm going London".
 Whre's this? - Dog
There is land west of Cornwall, it's just that it's covered by the sea: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyonesse
 Whre's this? - Runfer D'Hills
@ Gromit - Roscommon?
Last edited by: Runfer D'Hills on Tue 13 May 14 at 20:52
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