rsquare Posted February 16, 2016 #1 Share Posted February 16, 2016 We're mulling over the 5 November westbound TA, and have noticed that Cunard designates it as M625N. Oh, thought I, it is probably one of those trips that start in Hamburg, and the letter codes the Soton-NY portion. But no, it originates in the UK. Does anyone have any idea what the N suffix stands for (or indeed any other suffixes [suffices?] that Cunard uses - I've also seen A, B, C and D). Incidentally, if you search for plain vanilla M625 on Cunard.com, you'll be told that it doesn't exist; you need the N to get it to show in the list of crossings. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kamloops50 Posted February 16, 2016 #2 Share Posted February 16, 2016 (edited) We're mulling over the 5 November westbound TA, and have noticed that Cunard designates it as M625N. Oh, thought I, it is probably one of those trips that start in Hamburg, and the letter codes the Soton-NY portion. But no, it originates in the UK. Does anyone have any idea what the N suffix stands for (or indeed any other suffixes [suffices?] that Cunard uses - I've also seen A, B, C and D). Incidentally, if you search for plain vanilla M625 on Cunard.com, you'll be told that it doesn't exist; you need the N to get it to show in the list of crossings. Sometimes if one cruise is up of a number cruises. The main cruise will a letter after it . The subcruises will have a similiar number with a different letter after. Edited February 16, 2016 by Kamloops50 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BnB Cruiser Posted February 16, 2016 #3 Share Posted February 16, 2016 Is it maybe because they are also selling the 5th November TA from SOU to NYC as a 14 day roundtrip SOU-NYC-SOU. I only suggest this as I am considering the 14 day roundtrip leaving SOU on 5th Nov :) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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