And it seems 'level' has a different meaning than 'floor'. You can be on Level Four but on Floor Three.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Featured Post
The Catholic Church’s new deal with China
Below is Denis Staunton’s feature piece in The Irish Times on Saturday. Denis is based in China and is The Irish Times correspondent in the ...
-
Benedict Gerard Hegarty was Fr Benedict Hegarty OP born in Passage West, Co Cork on February 13, 1937. He attended Christian Brothers Colleg...
-
John O’Rourke was born in Newry on November 14, 1939. He joined the Dominican Order in September 1958 and was ordained a priest in July 1965...
-
Michael O’Hare joined the Michael O'Hare Dominican Order after his Leaving Cert at Synge Street CBS. On completion of the noviciate in P...
2 comments:
Ground Floor is usually equal with level 1. First Floor equals level 2. And so on...
But you use the word 'usually'. Not always and once it's not 'always' it loses all meaning. And what's wrong with 'floor', the word that has always been used in Ireland?
And actually in some buildings Level 1 means the floor above the ground floor.
Post a Comment