It’s a British term. I don’t know what the American equivalent is.I have lived in the USA my entire life (minus a couple of vacations) and I have never heard that term before. Sounds like something civil engineers might call them.
It’s a British term. I don’t know what the American equivalent is.I have lived in the USA my entire life (minus a couple of vacations) and I have never heard that term before. Sounds like something civil engineers might call them.
Had to look it up and "on/off ramp" would be the American equivalentI have lived in the USA my entire life (minus a couple of vacations) and I have never heard that term before. Sounds like something civil engineers might call them.
It’s a British term. I don’t know what the American equivalent is.
He said he was using his “British-sounding "English (UK) Google Maps voice assistant”.He said, "You", meaning me, and I'm American, so shrug.
That's why it sounded like Dick Van Dyke!He said he was using his “British-sounding "English (UK) Google Maps voice assistant”.
He said he was using his “British-sounding "English (UK) Google Maps voice assistant”.
Sure they do -- they're on-ramps/off-ramps.I've never heard them called anything in particular in common parlance. They don't get referenced as a separate thing.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.