On 20/12/19 10:15, Chris Hill wrote:
I have been a native British English speaker for about sixty years. A
trip from A to B and then back to A, either on a fully reversed route
or an alternative route, would could be described as a round trip.
There is certainly no element of a curved or looping route required to
make it a round trip.
Nor is there anything in 'round trip' to exclude a curved circular
route. Would be interesting to find the origin of 'round trip'.
HTH
Chris
--
cheers
Chris Hill (chillly)
On 19/12/2019 22:48, Phake Nick wrote:
Merriam Webster and some other resources you have quoted are
dictionary for American English, not the variant of English used by
OSM. Posts by original author of the topic on the wiki talk page have
explained the meaning of the term in British English.
在 2019年12月20日週五 06:19,Francesco Ansanelli <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> 寫道:
Il gio 19 dic 2019, 23:00 Warin <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> ha scritto:
On 20/12/19 01:16, Francesco Ansanelli wrote:
> Dear List,
>
> I have updated the roundtrip page and created the closed
loop proposal
> in order to address the misuse of the first tag:
> https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:roundtrip
>
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposed_features/Tag:closed_loop=yes
>
> Please let me know what you think
>
The word 'round' implies circular. So a 'roundtrip' could be
a circular
I'm not a mother tongue but:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/round%20trip
Definition of /round trip/
: a trip to a place and back usually over the same route
Oxford Dictionary (usually taken as a good source for UK English): a
journey to a place and back again
Nothing about 'over the same route'.
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/roundtrip
A trip from one place to another and back, usually over the same
route.
https://www.yourdictionary.com/round-trip
round trip
noun
A trip from one place to another and back, usually over the same
route.
Idk if it's clearer why I tried to match the definition.
route that does not go from A to B and back along the same
route, it
could go A to B to C and then back to A via D. As such your
rewording is
wrong and does not match present use.
Revert your change.
How about a voting?
You may have done that before your change.
As I understand it you want to distinguish between routes that use the
same route to return to the same place compared to those routes that
return to the same place by a different route or at least sections are
different.
At present both of those are in OSMs 'roundtrip'. Would not this
information be obtained by looking at the route as mapped in OSM? Is
there a need to add this information?
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