British term of address

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Possible Answers: GUV.

Last seen on: NY Times Crossword 3 Jan 2018, Wednesday

Random information on the term “GUV”:

The Composite Corridor (or CK) is a railway coach with a number of compartments, some of which are standard class (previously second, né third class) and some first class, linked by a side corridor.

The composite coach was a standard coach design going back to the early days of railways, enabling a railway company to provide multi-class passenger accommodation in a single vehicle and so reduce costs. In the book “Red For Danger” by L.T.C Rolt it is mentioned that the train which came to grief at Wigan on the night of 2 August 1873 featured a Caledonian Railway composite coach. Early composite coaches did not feature corridors or gangways between the vehicles.

Once communicating gangways between coaches were introduced, a side corridor was provided to allow passengers and staff to walk up and down the train, while seated passengers in compartments were not disturbed, and thus the various types of side-corridor coaches were developed.

In the BR Mk1 era, non-gangwayed composite coaches were constructed for use on suburban lines, these had a side corridor connecting all the compartments of one class to a central toilet, with a similar corridor connecting the compartments of the other class to a different toilet. Thus first class passengers could move between the first class compartments, and third/second class passengers likewise move about their area, but there was no communication between the classes or to adjacent coaches. A non-gangwayed Corridor Composite of this type, designated “CL” (as opposed to CK for the gangwayed version), is preserved at the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway.

GUV on Wikipedia