There is also the numbering system used in towns around Salt Lake City and into 
southern Idaho.  Some major streets close to the main temple (or the first 
temple established) are named by their distance from the temple.  So you can be 
at 540 West 400 South, with the second part of that being the street name.  Way 
to easy to get turned about, at least for me.

David




________________________________
From: David Lynch <[email protected]>

All the local variations make it fun to play "spot the out-of-town
traffic reporter." Austin's dialect is pretty easy to get wrong unless
you're aware of it -- all of the major highways have both names and
numbers but some are referred to only by name and some only by number,
there are very few streets where the direction at the start of the
name or the type at the end are optional (either everyone uses it or
nobody does, pretty much,) and my personal favorite, an arterial
street with a fraction in its name. People can't seem to agree on
whether it's "38th 1/2 St", "38 1/2th St" or "38 1/2 St" (I prefer the
first one, because it keeps with using ordinal numbers without making
me twist my tongue around "halfth"), but seeing it the first time
seems to throw most people.
-- 
David J. Lynch
[email protected]


      
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