I believe some ECD dance callers use "left file" and "right file".
Even before Larks/Robins, contra dances I've been to where a dance needed to indicate the lines often just picked landmarks for the walkthrough, and then prompted the move without them, like "windows side arch, door side dive through" for teaching, and "arch and dive" during prompting.

In dance,
Julian Blechner
he/him
Western Mass, USA


On Tue, Oct 14, 2025 at 6:55 AM Rich Goss via Contra Callers <contracallers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I recently attended a ceilidgh in London.   The caller called Flying Scotsman which is a longways set.   They arranged it by the taller on the left and designated them 2s.   The shorter line 1s.   Thought it was a clever way to set it up.  They would call something like “2s line arch, 1s line lead through”.   This may be common in th UK, but it was new to me (a travelling US person)
As far as to say whether certain roll terms should or shouldn’t be used, well…I’m not wading into that.

Rich

> On Oct 13, 2025, at 9:35 PM, Michael Fuerst via Contra Callers <contracallers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
> 
> Before the rise to prominence of larks and robins, callers and dance transcriptions would occasionally refer to the gents'/ladies' line as the line in which gets/ladies would line up for a proper dance.
> Should this now rarely used designation be declared obsolete or deprecated, or should we now occasionally refer to the gents' and ladies' lines
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