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Railway lines around Clapham Junction

Pronunciation

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  • (UK) IPA(key): /klæpəm d͡ʒʌŋkʃən/
  • Audio (UK):(file)

Proper noun

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Clapham Junction

  1. (rail transport) A major rail transport hub in south-west London, England, which has the distinction of being the busiest railway station in Britain.
    • 1951 March, M. D. Greville, “The Nomenclature of Railway Stations”, in Railway Magazine, page 193:
      It has never been satisfactorily explained how Clapham Junction came by its name. It is in Mid-Battersea, and is so indicated in Bradshaw.
  2. The surrounding area in the London Borough of Wandsworth (OS grid ref TQ2775).

Noun

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Clapham Junction (uncountable)

  1. (figurative) Somewhere where many paths – either literal routes of travel or metaphorical lines – cross.
    • 1896, Grant Allen, Under Sealed Orders: A Novel, page 49:
      When they had reached this Clapham Junction of the local highway system, Mr. Hayward halted a moment in doubt , and pointed ahead inquiringly to one out of the three main routes that branched off in various directions .
    • 1948, The Lancet, page 114:
      Dr. F. W. BUNTING favours more rigid isolation of actual cases and avoidance of large assemblies - particularly children's film matinées which he described as a Clapham Junction for virus dissemination.
    • 1953, Investors Chronicle and Money Market Review:
      The mouth of the Atlantic, between Ushant and the South of Ireland, is a Clapham Junction of the ocean trade routes.
    • 1967, New Society:
      All these can be grasped in half an hour by those who want to understand more clearly this Clapham Junction of the sciences that we call the digital computer.
    • 2007, Miranda Miller, Loving Mephistopheles, Peter Owen Publishers:
      Lizzie's face is a Clapham Junction of lines, wrinkles, shadows and tunnelling dirt.