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Author Topic: End of the line for the phrase "this train terminates here"  (Read 4667 times)
ChrisB
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« on: August 04, 2024, 20:29:04 »

From The Telegraph, via MSN

Quote
Rail companies are swapping the phrase “this train terminates here” in favour of “this train ends its journey here” to make “language easy to understand for everyone”.

On-board announcements across three major rail companies are being adjusted because rail bosses think the word “terminate” is too “jargony” and “bureaucratic” for modern-day passengers.

It is part of a years-long drive by Britain’s railway companies to simplify how they communicate with passengers.

Language campaigners have welcomed the move, saying it would make life easier for foreign passengers, but warned that it could lead to travellers paying less attention to important information.

Great Western Railway has told staff to avoid old-fashioned terms when making Tannoy announcements, and instead to make them “clear and engaging”.

Remove the word “terminate”
Meanwhile, pre-recorded announcements on LNER» (London North Eastern Railway - about) and South Western Railway trains are being updated to remove the word “terminate” from end-of-the-line broadcasts.

Removing the word “terminate” is part of a project started in 2019 which has seen paper tickets redesigned and online information revised to strip out confusing wording.

Phasing out of the phrase is expected to continue over the next few years as new rolling stock is introduced with the modernised wording installed on public address systems as standard.

Other railway-specific terms such as “alight” are also expected to disappear over time as part of the drive towards clearer English.

A GWR (Great Western Railway) spokesman said: “We give our teams a fair bit of leeway in how they make announcements clear and engaging for customers.

“Every now and then we tweak our guidance to colleagues, and terminating ‘terminates’ seems like a sensible move to make way for something less jargony and needlessly bureaucratic.”

‘Native tongue’
A spokeswoman for the Rail Delivery Group (RDG(resolve)), the trade association for privatised passenger train companies, added: “We are always looking at how we can improve communication to customers and part of that is about making the language easy to understand for everyone.

“Some onboard announcements have been updated by train operators following an in-depth review of customer feedback. This is part of the Smarter Information, Smarter Journeys programme to improve customer information.”

Tony Maher, general manager of the Plain English Campaign, said that removing “terminate” could make it easier to understand rail announcements for passengers for whom English is not their native tongue.

“I would actually say that’s a good change… the word terminate probably would confuse more people if they’ve got English as a second language,” he said.

“I think the word ‘terminate’, with it being longer and more complicated, they’re less likely to understand it. And we tend to find, because of that, they will listen a bit more carefully.”

‘Obscure railway terminology’
Mr Maher added that jargon was not necessarily harder for non-native English speakers to understand.

“We do tend to find, believe it or not, that people who’ve got English as a second language actually have a better grasp of grammar than people in the UK (United Kingdom) because it’s taught differently in a lot of other countries,” he said.

A 2019 mystery shopper study commissioned by the RDG found: “Across the industry, there has been a legacy of some locations and regions using obscure railway terminology and jargon, rather than talking in simple customer-centric language.

“We did hear one passenger say that they thought the information was produced ‘by railway people for railway people’ thus underlining the opportunity for improvement.”

Part of the reason why rolling out new announcements is expected to take years is because those who originally recorded the voiceovers used today have since died, making it harder to insert new words and phrases.

Celia Drummond, whose voice is played on South Western Railway’s trains as well as London Underground’s Northern Line to this day, died in 2021.

Likewise, Phil Sayer, whose voice is also heard on trains and at stations up and down the country, died in 2016 after suffering cancer.
« Last Edit: August 05, 2024, 07:45:03 by grahame » Logged
IndustryInsider
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« Reply #1 on: August 04, 2024, 22:49:12 »

Going back to Thames Trains days, there was a policy to remove the word ‘terminate’ as I was felt it might upset passengers who had experienced abortions.
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TaplowGreen
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« Reply #2 on: August 05, 2024, 07:02:27 »

I believe the term "cancellations and alterations due to crew shortages" is to be removed in favour of the term "normal service", in order to more accurately reflect GWR (Great Western Railway)'s performance.
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bobm
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« Reply #3 on: August 05, 2024, 07:18:29 »

I remember after Clapham there was a concerted effort not to use the phrase “signalling failure” after the cause of the accident was publicised. 
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grahame
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« Reply #4 on: August 05, 2024, 07:42:56 »

I have to wonder if we are being too considerate as we water down wording for sensitivity reasons. "This train in the timetable at 17:44 will not run due to insufficient funding from HMG to staff it" may be the truth, but it's likely to upset the members of HMG who have restricted the funding and consider cancellation rates of around 10% sometimes acceptable.
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« Reply #5 on: August 05, 2024, 07:57:00 »

I certainly empathise with the consideration that clearer terminology facilitates and ameliorates comprehension.
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TonyK
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« Reply #6 on: August 05, 2024, 08:35:00 »

I certainly empathise with the consideration that clearer terminology facilitates and ameliorates comprehension.

Indubitably, and may I offer my most enthusiastic contrafibularities!
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JayMac
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« Reply #7 on: August 05, 2024, 08:47:38 »

The rail companies are anaspeptic, phrasmotic, even compunctuous to have caused passengers such pericombobulation.
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« Reply #8 on: August 05, 2024, 09:52:11 »

Some of the contributors to this forum have evidently been binge watching Blackadder videos.

BTW (by the way) if 'terminate' is to be relocated to an appropriate redundant material receptacle does the term 'terminus' also suffer the same fate? And, if so, with what would it be replaced?
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grahame
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« Reply #9 on: August 05, 2024, 11:18:56 »

BTW (by the way) if 'terminate' is to be relocated to an appropriate redundant material receptacle does the term 'terminus' also suffer the same fate? And, if so, with what would it be replaced?

There should be no such thing as a terminus station - for example Severn Beach should be extended to Pilning , Scarborough should extend to Whitby, Henley on Thames should be extended to join up at Marlow, and Windsor Central should join to Windsor Riverside. In extremis, all stations at line ends should be loops like Dungeness on the RH&D.
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TaplowGreen
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« Reply #10 on: August 05, 2024, 11:37:45 »

BTW (by the way) if 'terminate' is to be relocated to an appropriate redundant material receptacle does the term 'terminus' also suffer the same fate? And, if so, with what would it be replaced?

There should be no such thing as a terminus station - for example Severn Beach should be extended to Pilning , Scarborough should extend to Whitby, Henley on Thames should be extended to join up at Marlow, and Windsor Central should join to Windsor Riverside. In extremis, all stations at line ends should be loops like Dungeness on the RH&D.

Knowing the geography of Windsor, how would you propose joining Central to Riverside? Tunnel under the castle? Or perhaps a flyover to allow customers to wave down at His Majesty from on high?
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« Reply #11 on: August 05, 2024, 12:11:45 »

Knowing the geography of Windsor, how would you propose joining Central to Riverside? Tunnel under the castle?

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Ralph Ayres
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« Reply #12 on: August 05, 2024, 12:59:01 »

“This train ends its journey here” sounds to me at least as though the train is about to be sent to the scrapyard. Terminates is shorter and so should be simpler.  I do wonder if this is a circular problem as in our desire to keep things simple we drop words seen as jargon so people don't get to hear them in context and don't get used to them.  A parallel is the way slam doors on trains became more dangerous as they were being phased out because fewer passengers were used to them.
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plymothian
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« Reply #13 on: August 05, 2024, 13:35:37 »

'Vestibule' is also on GWR (Great Western Railway)'s list for the chopping block.
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TaplowGreen
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« Reply #14 on: August 05, 2024, 13:37:36 »

Knowing the geography of Windsor, how would you propose joining Central to Riverside? Tunnel under the castle?

 Wink

https://prezi.com/t4nowetbs2gw/wlr-masterplan/#_0_24309637 

That's a really interesting idea.

Do you know if it got anywhere or is/was it just to prompt debate as it suggests?

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