Just wondering. What determines whether the name of a place on the route ahead is in brackets or not. Seems a bit arbitrary.

https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1f9lvqg

Posted by Giant-of-a-man

13 Comments

  1. OptimusTractorX on

    Brackets mean you’re currently going the right direction but there’s a turn off coming your way. 

  2. External-Chemical-71 on

    No brackets= End destination of road.
    Brackets = Other destinations en route or as exits from road.

  3. Annatastic6417 on

    The bracket means you will have to turn off eventually if you’re going to that place. No bracket means the road you’re on leads to the town.

  4. Motorway and dual carriageway road signs are actually really well done, the signs every .5km telling you how far you’ve gone are useful too

  5. Prestigious_Talk6652 on

    Should put Irish and English in different colours. Would be easier to read at a glance.

  6. Do these road signs usually just have ‘Áth Cliath’ as the translation for Dublin?

    Isn’t it missing the ‘Baile’?

  7. Usually brackets mean that at some point you have to turn off the road and take another road to get to the place. For instance Dundalk is put in brackets on the N2 southbound near Monaghan/Castleblayney as you have to turn onto the N53 to actually get there.

    These signs do seem a bit arbitrary though. You do have to turn off the M11 to get into the towns of Bray/Wicklow, but you also have to turn off every other motorway to get into towns not in brackets. Seems a bit strange that they’re in brackets.