The term densha otaku was coined to refer to people passionate about train and all things related to trains in Japan. The train culture is indeed very developed among the Japanese population who likes train travel.
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The word for geeks who are obsessed with trains is railfans or train enthusiasts. They are often referred to as rai.
Not Being Noisy on the Train is an Iron RuleThere is no rule against talking in the train car, but if your conversation is loud enough to be heard by those around you, it is considered rude and annoying. Japanese consider discussing private matters in public to be unseemly and rude.
The conductor title is most common in North American railway operations, but the role is common worldwide under various job titles. In Commonwealth English, a conductor is also known as guard or train manager. A conductor on an Amtrak train.
By Philip Kendall. Women-only cars on Japan's railways have existed in some form or other for more than 50 years, with “hana densha” (literally “flower train”) carriages originally being introduced as a way of keeping female students safe from the advances of lecherous men during the peak hours.
It has been variously called train phobia, railroad phobia, dread of railway travel, etc. The German term Eisenbahnangst used, e.g., by Sigmund Freud was literally converted into Greek as siderodromophobia (Eisen = sideron = iron, Bahn = dromos = way, Angst = phobos = fear).
Hobbyists, called railway modellers or model railroaders, may maintain models large enough to ride (see Live steam, Ridable miniature railway and Backyard railroad). Modellers may collect model trains, building a landscape for the trains to pass through. They may also operate their own railroad in miniature.
A railfan, rail buff or train buff (American English), railway enthusiast, railway buff or trainspotter (Australian/British English), or ferroequinologist is a person who is recreationally interested in trains and rail transport systems.
The term hobo is a loose one used to define everything from happy-go-lucky train hoppers to large homeless communities (and sometimes derogatorily so). But in its most popular definition, itinerant workers traveling the country by train use the word to describe themselves and their unique and intentional lifestyle.