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brightbeige | 9 months ago

In case you also couldn’t guess the “f” in TfL, it’s Transport for London.

https://tfl.gov.uk/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_for_London

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moomin|9 months ago

You can blame Blair, I think, for the fashion of putting “for” into the names of administrative organisations.

AStonesThrow|9 months ago

Indeed, the Department for Transport was renamed in 1997, and TfL followed suit in 2000.

There is a minor fandom controversy over the Ministry of Magic in the Wizarding World and whether the "Ministry for Magic" and "Minister for Magic" are valid alternate terms, but I have only identified one instance where JK Rowling wrote it this way, and it was outside the novels. Canonically, Harry turned 17 in 1997, so I suppose Tony Blair's reforms wouldn't apply post-Voldemort. However, Platform 9¾ is now "properly labelled" in the Muggles' King's Cross Station.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cmglee_London_Kings_...

Travellers should also mind the gap between "TfL" and "TLF Travel Alerts", a defunct account which was part of Weird Twitter, and somewhere I hope I can dig up an archive, because the daily alerts were comic genius in 140 characters or less.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paddington_Bear_Stat...

The arrival of Paddington Bear from Darkest Peru may be partly explained by the heating of the Tube stations. He surely would be right at home in a dark, humid and warm environment. My mother encouraged me to read about Paddington Bear, and in 2008 I was privileged to have a layover in Westminster, where I passed through Paddington Station and totally missed out on visiting the Paddington Bear statue therein. But I was able to purchase a refrigerator magnet bearing the "MIND THE GAP" official logo, which I presented to her in gratitude.

devnullbrain|9 months ago

In case you missed the 4 places it's made explicit in the graphs, or 'London' in the URL.