Airion wrote:
neuroheart wrote:
Airion wrote:
OMG, really? They're CALLED zebra crossing because THEY HAVE BLACK AND WHITE STRIPES! No actual zebras are involved!
Yeah, but it's a potentially confusing term to Americans who have never heard it, plus it's easy to make jokes about.
Google is your friend. There's even a picture of one on the first page! And they have them in NY, so I just assumed that the rest of the country would have them to. That might not be what the local populace call them, but they're there nonetheless.
...I think I need to lay down
You're stressing yourself out over nothing, here. Do you really need me to break this down for you?
In the U.S. we call them
crosswalks or
pedestrian crossings. We also have
deer crossings. It's an easy leap for an American to make that when you say "(blank) crossing" you're talking about a place where (blank) crosses the street. Therefore, it's rich fodder for
jokes, even for those who do know what it's actually supposed to mean.
I happen to know a lot of English terms because I've made friends with several people there and watch a lot of BBC shows, so I knew what you meant, but I was also perplexed the first time I heard the term "zebra crossing" because, well, it sounded like a place for zebras to cross the street.
Of course we have them, we have them all over the place, but no one who grew up here is going to call them zebra crossings. No one. Any more than you would refer to a fringe as "bangs," which is what we call it. Do you google every American colloquialism you see? Do you even immediately know that it's a colloquialism?
(Also, most people here were joking, because to us it sounds like a pretty funny term. Seriously.)