Street suffix
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A street suffix is the word that follows the name of a street to further describe that street. Some examples in the United States, other than "street," are avenue, road, drive, and lane.
[edit] Common American Street Suffixes
- Alley (usually refers to a rear service road used as access to garages, service doors, Dumpsters, etc.)
- Avenue (one of the most common suffixes, can refer to a small residential street or a major roadway)
- Boulevard (usually indicates a wide street, often tree-lined, that is of major importance)
- Bypass (usually used after another suffix, for example: "Tenth Street Bypass")
- Circle (usually a small residential street whose shape is circular)
- Court (usually a residential street which is a cul-de-sac)
- Cove (similar to court, and often named after the street it connects to)
- Drive (usually used in suburban areas both for residential streets and major roadways)
- Esplanade (usually designates a pedestrian-only space)
- Expressway (usually used for limited-access highways)
- Extension (usually used after another suffix, for example: "Maple Avenue Extension")
- Freeway (usually used for limited-access highways)
- Highway (can designate a limited-access highway or a major US or state route)
- Lane (usually refers to a small residential street)
- Loop (usually used for streets whose shape is that of a half-circle)
- Mall (usually designates a pedestrian-only space)
- Parkway (occasionally designates limited-access highways, but usually used in a way similar to boulevard)
- Path (usually a small residential street)
- Pike (historically referred to a tolled roadway, but can also be used for a major road)
- Place (usually a small residential street or a narrow street in a commercial district)
- Plaza (often refers to a suburban shopping area and its internal roadways)
- Promenade (usually designates a pedestrian-only space)
- Road (a very common suffix used to describe a main roadway in both residential and commercial areas)
- Route (typically includes a route number, for example, US Route 19)
- Spur (a road that juts off another road which may or may not rejoin the main road)
- Square (often used on streets whose shape is like a square or rectangle, often with a center park or plaza)
- Street (a very common suffix that can describe from a small residential street up to a major arterial roadway)
- Terrace (historically was a small residential street that was elevated above the surroundings, for example, on a hillside, but is now used in a more generic way to describe a residential street)
- Thruway (usually used for limited-access highways)
- Trace (usually a small residential street)
- Trail (often designates a residential street but can also include major roadways)
- Turnpike (usually used for limited-access highways)
- Viaduct (usually indicates a street that serves as a connector between two other streets)
- Walk (usually designates a pedestrian-only space)
- Way (wide range of use, from an alley-like definition to a residential street to a major roadway in new developments)