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I think a lot of it comes from what we were taught in grade school. In early grade school don't you remember lining up on the right side of the hallway to go to lunch. Also, if you have a military background, you are drilled to walk on the right side of the hallway.
Here in the US it is utter chaos if you are not on a military base. Walmart always drives me nuts with people walking down the left side of the aisle instead of the correct right hand side. Makes me wish everyone in the US had to at least go through basic training. You drive on the right, walk on the right.
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Telika: Related question, I guess : which side of the escalators are used to "walking" and for "stationary" people ?
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Psyringe: Here in Germany, it's "Right side: standing; left side: walking". I've even seen signs dangling over escalators which gave exactly these instructions.
Here in the USA, it's block the escalator or walkway by just standing in the middle or even better have all of your friends stand shoulder to shoulder. But it's supposed to be stand on the right and walk to the left.
Post edited April 23, 2014 by jjsimp
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Fever_Discordia: I think most English people just hide in their offices until they're ABSOLUTLY sure that the coast is clear before venturing out just to avoid potentially awkward situations like this and others such as should you nod or say high to someone you only vaguely know? What if they say 'Good Morning' at the last second and you miss your opportunity to say it back without it being weird? And don't get me started on the whole minefield of whether or not to hold doors open for someone you're aware is behind you...
Being a repressed, awkward Englishman is a nightmare sometimes - how I wish I could just be Scottish and stagger around drunkenly head-butting people! *sigh*
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reaver894: England have their equivalent of the Scottish way of doing things.

I think its called Liverpool
and/or Newcastle, anywhere north of Nottingham, really...
If you're in London, put your head down, choose your preferred side and stick with it - the assumption is the person walking towards you will notice and react accordingly.

If you're anywhere else in the UK, stop, have a little friendly chat and then move on. I have family in the rural south of Italy and there you stop, find a seat, a chat, a smoke, a coffee and maybe a light lunch...then move on.
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TekZero: As I was walking back to my office, I was wondering why it was natural to move to the right and not the left. In fact if i had moved to the left, I would've bumped into the other person. My first guess was that we moved to the right because we drive on the right.
Actually, the preference for right has a lot to do with how our brains are wired. In about 85-90% of the population the left half of the brain is dominant and therefore they have a dominant right half of the body. Yes, our bodies are weird (and wired) that way.

As such we tend to prefer the right in a lot of ways, even going so far that it seeped into our language (right, righteous,...). And of course when having to chose one of two sides (consciously or unconsciously), the right is picked more often than not unless we have been conditioned to do otherwise.
Post edited April 23, 2014 by Randalator
Not sure if there were mentioned already, but a few things to this:

In Finland we drive on the right side, and stand on the right side on escalators.

In Thailand, both are reversed. So you drive on the left, and stand on the left side on escalators (and pass from the right in both cases). Mentioning this as someone mentioned that just because they drive on the left side, does not mean the same applies in escalators and such. At least in Thailand it seems to matter.


It might be an urban legend (and I have probably mentioned it before), but one martial arts instructor (specialized in Japanese arts) claimed to me that the reason why at least Japanese walk (and hence, drive) on the left side is so that the when a samurai passes another samurai coming from the opposite direction, your sword sheaths will not clank together, as that was considered as a challenge to a duel or some such shit in feudal Japan (or maybe it is just considered rude or something). When you walk on the left side, the same will not happen, as the sheath is normally on the left side of your waist. Or maybe they were just wary of any incoming person grabbing their sword, hence not letting them pass from your left? (just guessing) This occurred to me as I've noticed how careful policemen seem to be in public so that no one can grab their gun from their waist.

I'm 60% sure that is just some urban legend, but there you have it. No idea why some people decided to drive on the right side, and others (apparently mainly Asian countries and UK?) on the left side.
Post edited April 23, 2014 by timppu
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Fever_Discordia: I think most English people just hide in their offices until they're ABSOLUTLY sure that the coast is clear before venturing out just to avoid potentially awkward situations like this and others such as should you nod or say high to someone you only vaguely know? What if they say 'Good Morning' at the last second and you miss your opportunity to say it back without it being weird? And don't get me started on the whole minefield of whether or not to hold doors open for someone you're aware is behind you...
Being a repressed, awkward Englishman is a nightmare sometimes - how I wish I could just be Scottish and stagger around drunkenly head-butting people! *sigh*
I wish I could just be Scottish and stagger around drunkenly head butting people "sign" WTF you prat or eegit when I'm on holiday all I see is your drunken louts from your country that makes me feel ashamed to be britsh.
^ heheheh!
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StingingVelvet: I was just in Britain and Ireland and discovered people walk both ways. It was kind of a clusterfuck, honestly.
You should have called. Did you try visiting Victoria station in the morning? That's a mosh pit of businessmen where you could actually enjoy a pint on the pub above, just watching them collide.
Slightly off-topic but...

Escalators - opposite to driving. Overtake on the left. If you stand on the left, if you're lucky, you get glared at. If you're unlucky...
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timppu: It might be an urban legend (and I have probably mentioned it before), but one martial arts instructor (specialized in Japanese arts) claimed to me that the reason why at least Japanese walk (and hence, drive) on the left side is so that the when a samurai passes another samurai coming from the opposite direction, your sword sheaths will not clank together, as that was considered as a challenge to a duel or some such shit in feudal Japan (or maybe it is just considered rude or something). When you walk on the left side, the same will not happen, as the sheath is normally on the left side of your waist. Or maybe they were just wary of any incoming person grabbing their sword, hence not letting them pass from your left? (just guessing) This occurred to me as I've noticed how careful policemen seem to be in public so that no one can grab their gun from their waist.
There is that - but when you have sword on left, its also easier to pull it and strike to your right side vs left side.

Also if youre riding horse and meet someone on the road: want to do something (strike or what else) with your main (right) hand while holding the harness with the other, its far easier to do if you ride on left vs right.

If i remember right, right hand traffic was born in French after their revolution - i think they just wanted to do things differently "in the new Age". Also apparently as french army was ordered to stick to right, they kinda started to force it upon others as well.

But i am no historian.
I don't have time to read much of the thread, but I'd doubt that which side one passes on has anything significant to do with which side of the road you drive on. There's one reason for that: if it was true, we'd see far more 'getting stuck' in areas containing mostly non-drivers, such as schools. Since there isn't any major difference that I've seen...Of course, primary schools [ages 5-11, for those who don't know the British system] there are more collisions, but that would be due to young children not paying attention/having learnt the subconscious signals/etc.
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Fever_Discordia: I think most English people just hide in their offices until they're ABSOLUTLY sure that the coast is clear before venturing out just to avoid potentially awkward situations like this and others such as should you nod or say high to someone you only vaguely know? What if they say 'Good Morning' at the last second and you miss your opportunity to say it back without it being weird? And don't get me started on the whole minefield of whether or not to hold doors open for someone you're aware is behind you...
Being a repressed, awkward Englishman is a nightmare sometimes - how I wish I could just be Scottish and stagger around drunkenly head-butting people! *sigh*
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Jacobite: I wish I could just be Scottish and stagger around drunkenly head butting people "sign" WTF you prat or eegit when I'm on holiday all I see is your drunken louts from your country that makes me feel ashamed to be britsh.
LOL I was just reffing how the previous, Scottish poster was describing himself and, yes the English make the worst kind of tourists. I also choose to play the 'I'm actually 50% Irish' card at this point not sure what good it will do but I'm panicking because I've just pissed off a Jock and don't want to be drunkenly head-butted, or force fed deep fried mars bars or anything!
Post edited April 23, 2014 by Fever_Discordia
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Fever_Discordia: I also choose to play the 'I'm actually 50% Irish' card at this point not sure what good it will do but I'm panicking because I've just pissed off a Jock and don't want to be drunkenly head-butted, or force fed deep fried mars bars or anything!
*passes spade. points at hole. points out own nationality.

Don't say shit like that again please!
Post edited April 23, 2014 by Sachys
I thought up a stupid question about England not worthy of its own thread, so here goes:

Iceland is the land of ice, Greenland was a hook to make people think it's, well, green, and lots of other places have 'land', 'ville', etc., denoting that it's the place of 'something'.

So, in the history of England, what is the "Eng"?
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HereForTheBeer: I thought up a stupid question about England not worthy of its own thread, so here goes:

Iceland is the land of ice, Greenland was a hook to make people think it's, well, green, and lots of other places have 'land', 'ville', etc., denoting that it's the place of 'something'.

So, in the history of England, what is the "Eng"?
Just a linguistic corruption of Angles, the first people to inhabit Great Britain (later Anglo-Saxons).

So, land of the Angles: Angleland - Angland - England
Post edited April 23, 2014 by groze