Am Mo., 30. März 2020 um 01:11 Uhr schrieb Kevin Kenny < kevin.b.ke...@gmail.com>:
> One example: Berkeley Square in London. In form, it's a public garden, > but even the English designate it a town square. As I understand it, an > Englishman would not raise eyebrows at a sentence: "Winston Churchill, as a > child, lived in Berkeley Square. The Churchills' house, № 48, is the one > entirely residential building remaining there; the rest of the buildings > are all offices of financial concerns, much like the rest of Mayfair." > The thing is that squares often also serve as addresses and can be somehow seen very similar to streets, so the same as you can live in a street (meaning you live in a house on this street), you could also live on a square (a house bordering this square). At least it works like this in some languages I am aware of. Cheers Martin
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