What do the people in England call a garbage collector?
Question #70690. Asked by augiet.
Baloo55th
Answer has 4 votes
Baloo55th 22 year member
4545 replies
Answer has 4 votes.
SOmething unprintable if he spills the stuff... Seriously, we don't have the distinction between garbage and trash. It's all rubbish. The collectors are called bin-men by the people who put stuff in the bins, and refuse disposal operatives and other such names by the people who pay them. Things are getting somewhat confused now, though. There are several different lots of stuff collected. Here in the Borough of Sefton at present rubbish is put in black bags, garden waste in green bags, and cans, bottles and waste paper in green boxes. Just down the road in West Lancashire, they collect plastic bottles as well, but use wheelie bins for the garden stuff and rubbish. Recycling is in, big style. The cub pack I'm associated with collects scrap metal (copper, bronze, zinc, but mainly aluminium) to raise funds, so I can sometimes be found raiding green boxes...
Sep 13 2006, 10:35 AM
augiet
Answer has 2 votes
augiet 18 year member
13 replies
Answer has 2 votes.
Many Thanks
Sep 13 2006, 10:40 AM
satguru
Answer has 5 votes
Currently Best Answer
satguru Moderator 21 year member
1250 replies
Answer has 5 votes.
Currently voted the best answer.
Dustmen in London and surrounding areas at least. I think binmen is more northern.
Sep 13 2006, 10:43 AM
Little_Heaven
Answer has 2 votes
Little_Heaven 24 year member
13 replies
Answer has 2 votes.
Yes, the garbage collectors here don't get paid very well. In fact,you could say....they are paid a rubbish wage!
Sep 13 2006, 11:00 AM
lanfranco
Answer has 2 votes
lanfranco 20 year member
4170 replies
Answer has 2 votes.
In the U.S., Baloo, the distinction between "garbage" and "trash" pretty much exists only in a figurative sense. "Garbage" is something worthless, ridiculous, or not worth considering (rather like the figurative sense of "rubbish" in the U.K.). "Trash" is something, or someone, tacky and lower-class. We also use the verb "to trash," which means to destroy something, usually a hotel room occupied by rock stars and they partying friends.
Otherwise, trash and garbage mean the same thing -- rubbish to be collected and taken to a dump. There may be a regional usage issue here: I grew up with a trashman, but my husband's family had a garbageman.
Our trash/garbage collectors are usually unionized and make pretty good money. They deserve it.
Sep 13 2006, 4:44 PM
davejacobs
Answer has 2 votes
davejacobs 22 year member
956 replies
Answer has 2 votes.
I Hampshire (the old variety) we compromise and call then 'dustbinmen'.
Sep 14 2006, 1:08 AM
Baloo55th
Answer has 2 votes
Baloo55th 22 year member
4545 replies
Answer has 2 votes.
i remember reading somewhere about a British visitor to the USA who was told very firmly, 'Hey lady! I'm trash not garbage!' Never been certain which was which.