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Doors will open on the left

Smart cards, token, platform no... we get you the latest lingo from the new lifeline of Delhi.

Updated on: Sep 25, 2010 12:30 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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In 2002, Delhi Metro started its services by connecting East Delhi's Shahdara to north Delhi's Tis Hazari. In 2010, it connected Gurgaon and south Delhi to Connaught Place. In between, Anand Vihar was linked to Dwarka, and Rithala to Dilshad Garden. The Metro culture has ushered a new lifestyle into the Capital. We present a dictionary.

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HT Image

Metro
The Oxford English Mini Dictionary defines ‘Metro’ as ‘underground railway’. But in London, it’s called the ‘tube’. In New York City, it’s the ‘subway’. Delhi is like Paris and Madrid — it’s called Metro in all these cities.

Yellow Line
In the beginning, there was Blue line for private buses and White line for chartered buses. The Metro completed the rainbow with its yellow, red and violet lines. And yes… it will never leave us, the Blue line (on the Dwarka route).

Pillar No.
It’s no longer just the margs, streets and buildings. The addresses in localities where the Metro goes over the ground now has an easier-to-find identity. Eg: 40 Raja Garden, 1st floor, near Metro pillar no. 372. Or “Come for our daughter’s roka. Just follow the Metro, and turn left at pillar no. 125. The hotel is right opposite.”

Vishwavidyalya
If there were no Metro stop by this name in the North Campus of Delhi University, this tongue-twisting Hindi word, meaning ‘university’, would have never entered the lexicon of English Honours-Stephanians.

Metroites
There are very few people in showy Delhi who can travel to a Page 3 party in a DTC bus and be gutsy enough to say, “I came in the bus.” Autos were always too bourgeoisie and yellow-roofed cabs just managed to cross the line of acceptability. But for the people-like-us crowd, it’s okay to ride in the Metro. Nobody minds being a ‘Metroite’.

Cardholder
Delhi’s newest blue chip, it has the towering Qutub Minar on its front-side and a credit-card style number on its back. Called the ‘smart card’, it is the DTC pass equivalent of the Metro. The card saves the commuter from waiting in the token queue and gives you a 10 per cent discount. Smart.

Jebkatro se saavdhaan
Literally meaning ‘beware of pickpockets’, the Metro’s public address system strangely announces, “Pickpockets have been identified.” Then why are they still on the loose?

Token
Soon, there will be no tickets left. It’s the age of the token — nothing but a piece of stamped plastic. These reusable discs are fast replacing Delhi’s ticket civilisation, which may soon be gone with the Blueline buses.

Mind the gap
Everyone in this class-driven city minds the gap. It’s in our genes. Now, minding the gap has become ‘official’, thanks to the Metro. Here, however, the gap is real — the dangerous empty space between the coach door and the platform.

Boarding and de-boarding
You get into an auto, step into a bus and board a plane. The Delhi Metro, too, is upscale. No DTC culture here. You board, and you de-board. Like a frequent air traveller.

Adjust kar lo
Till 2002, it was only the blue-collared in the overcrowded Blueline buses who asked fellow commuters, “Adjust kar lo (please adjust).” Now, students, IT employees, ad executives, newspaper editors and sometimes even CEOs say, “Adjust kar lo.” Truly democratic.

 
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