(1) Roundabouts | The Widening Gyre; Like parliamentary democracy, roundabouts are a great British export with a risk.
http://www.economist.com/news/le ... xport-risk-widening
Note:
(a) British inventions: football, Worcestershire sauce, jellied eel
(i) football
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Football
(section 3,2 Medieval and early modern Europe)
(ii) Worcestershire sauce
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worcestershire_sauce
(fermented anchovy)
(iii) jellied eel
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jellied_eel
(The eel is a naturally gelatinous fish so the cooking process releases proteins, like collagen, into the liquid which solidify on cooling to form a jelly)
(b) "roundabout, first in Letchworth Garden City in 1909, * * * proved so popular in Britain that in the 1960s the Transport Research Laboratory developed a miniature version"
(i) roundabout
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roundabout
(view animation; section 2.2 Terminology)
French-English dictionary:
* rond-point (noun masculine): "roundabout"
* rond (adj; adv); "round"
* point (noun masculine): "point"
(ii) Letchworth
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letchworth
(officially Letchworth Garden City; in Hertfortshire)
(iii) Transport Research Laboratory
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_Research_Laboratory
Originally established in 1933 as a UK government agenct, it was privatised in 1996.
(c) "a roundabout in York with a windmill on it"
It is a working windmill. search images.google.com with roundabout, York and windmill.
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