When you say "land in East London known as the Isle of Dogs. Today, we know the area as Canary Wharf" I'd have say this is incorrect.
The Isle of Dogs is not the same as Canary Wharf. Canary Wharf is located on the Isle of Dogs and whwn people say Canary Wharf, they do not mean the Isle of Dogs, especially those who live in and around the area.
Thanks for the clarification. I'm aware that Canary Wharf is a subset of the region I'm describing, but I simply wanted a quick frame-of-reference that most people would be familiar with. If you take the river ferry to the Docklands Museum, the usual stop is Canary Wharf.
As part of writing the paragraph in question I asked ChatGPT:
"What should I call the today's region of London that was once the West India Docks?"
The response was:
"The area of London that was once the West India Docks is today generally known as Canary Wharf, part of the wider Docklands redevelopment."
When you say "land in East London known as the Isle of Dogs. Today, we know the area as Canary Wharf" I'd have say this is incorrect.
The Isle of Dogs is not the same as Canary Wharf. Canary Wharf is located on the Isle of Dogs and whwn people say Canary Wharf, they do not mean the Isle of Dogs, especially those who live in and around the area.
Thanks for the clarification. I'm aware that Canary Wharf is a subset of the region I'm describing, but I simply wanted a quick frame-of-reference that most people would be familiar with. If you take the river ferry to the Docklands Museum, the usual stop is Canary Wharf.
As part of writing the paragraph in question I asked ChatGPT:
"What should I call the today's region of London that was once the West India Docks?"
The response was:
"The area of London that was once the West India Docks is today generally known as Canary Wharf, part of the wider Docklands redevelopment."
I may be possessive if the place I grew up...