jutfrank
VIP Member
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2014
- Member Type
- English Teacher
- Native Language
- English
- Home Country
- England
- Current Location
- England
I think you have something there. I think there is also some element (where the place is completely flat) of 'up' being the direction of the more important/bigger thing. So, in a cul-de sac, up the road/street is towards the junction, down towards the dead end. When a road/street has no dead end, then up is towards a bigger road or the town (centre)
In my youth, many years ago, the up-train was the train was going in the direction of the nearest city, the down-train coming from it.
Yes. That all makes sense to me. It seems to me that up is in some sense more challenging, and in some way against the 'natural flow'. I suppose this notion comes from our experience of gravity, where things go from up to down.
I think your example of a cul-de-sac is a good one because it shows down to mean towards an end-point. We're more likely to say down to the end of the road than up to the end of the road, I think.