Several words have found themselves used in a number of phrases. We looked at 'bread' last time and this time it's 'road'.
Road test (of a vehicle) is first recorded in 1906, but not as a verb before 1937.
Road hogs, rather surprisingly, have been around since 1886.
However, road rage has only been seen since 1988.
Road maps have only been around since 1786, or at least the term has.
Road trip, still more often used in the USA but gaining popularity in Britain, was first used in 1950 but originally only of baseball teams. (Presumably when they were heading for an away game.)
Road runner, the Warner Brothers cartoon character dates from 1948, was first recorded in a document dated 1847. Of course the bird has been around for much longer – it is also known as a ‘long-tailed crested desert cuckoo’ or ‘the chaparral-cock’.
Nothing ran ‘off-road’ before 1949.
By-road (or side road as we would say in Britain) appears as early as 1670.
Post road, this a road on which there are stations used by post horses in a relay system to transport the mail, is first described as such in 1650.
The ring road, that which annoys so many when they are built on green belt land, is first seen in 1928.
Crossroad is first seen in the modern sense in 1808. Before then, and since the 1680s, it referred to a road which connects one main road to another. When roads were just tracks, a crossroad would be a single road with a marker on it showing where a meeting would take place.
Railroad is an American term and first seen in 1757 when referring to rails laid to allow heavy waggons to pass and used in mining operations. It was not applied to trains in the modern sense until 1825.
Roadkill is first seen in 1962.
Roadside is first seen in 1744, but not used as an adjective until 1810.
Roadblocks were not put up until 1940, prior to that they were known as something else – keep this in mind when the military in that First World War film put up a roadblock!
Roadwork is first seen in 1765 when it was used to refer to repairs or even making roads. This makes perfect sense as it coincides, more or less, with the turnpike roads. Surprisingly the sense of ‘to exercise’ comes as early as 1903.
To make inroads is first seen as 1540, when used to describe a hostile incursion.
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