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2006-06-26 07:30:34 · 24 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

24 answers

One Way Street

2006-06-26 07:33:57 · answer #1 · answered by auntie Jen 1 · 0 0

There was a great story in the news in the UK recently about a group of English football fans in Germany, who were lost and couldn't find their way back to where they had parked their car. So they found a German man and explained that they had written the street name down on a bit of paper, and asked if he could tell them how to get there. They'd written down "einbahn Strasse". D'oh!

2006-06-26 07:40:31 · answer #2 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

One-way street

2006-06-26 07:33:57 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

One Way Street.

2006-06-26 07:43:06 · answer #4 · answered by Andrew M 3 · 0 0

One way Street

2006-06-27 11:27:16 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it means one way street, the reason I know is that I followed a load of einbahn signs around Vienna when I was looking for the train station and I ended up going around in a one way circle.

Just so you know, bahn is not always a train - zug is a train. Bahnhof is train station and even though ein bahn is a train or one train - when you combine the words i.e. einbahn the meaning changes to one way, these things shouldn't be translated literally or it just becomes linguistic chaos

2006-06-26 23:19:02 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

One way street

2006-06-26 07:35:55 · answer #7 · answered by Mike 4 · 0 0

1 way street

2006-06-26 07:34:02 · answer #8 · answered by mynx8881 3 · 0 0

One-way street or one-way road
ein-one
bahn-way
strasse-street

2006-06-26 07:34:10 · answer #9 · answered by eyebum 5 · 0 0

One-way road

2006-06-26 07:34:22 · answer #10 · answered by Mariah♥ 3 · 0 0

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