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What's the difference between "in front of" and "across from" ? If I say that a building (B) is across the street from a house (H), the building is necessarily facing the house or it can be across the street but not exactly in the same direction from the house?
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B is across from H means, B is separated from H by X (X = a street, an alley, a table, a seat, etc.) B does b]not [/b]necessarily have to be facing H. "across from" refers to three, not two, variables:
B ____X______H (where X separates B from H)
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What do "go/walk up a street" and "go/walk down a street" mean? Is the difference between those expressions related do the orientation ( north, south, east, west), inclination of the street, flow of traffic or order of the numbers of the buildings located on the street?
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All of the above with the exception of 'flow of traffic'. 8) In the past, the meaning depended on the town's/city's development and history. In the present, it's the individual's perspective/idea of what's considered 'up the street' and 'down the street'.
:)