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Many countries use codes to speed the processing of mail.

In the US (and a few other countries due to the influence of the US), these codes are called zip codes. (ZIP was originally an acronym for "Zone Improvement Program".)

In most countries they're called "postal codes". So, if you live in the US and someone asks for your postal code, they're asking for what you call a zip code. If you live outside the US and someone asks for your zip code, they're asking for what you probably call a postal code.

They're not technically exactly the same thing, but it's along the lines of asking for a Coke and getting a Pepsi instead: slightly disgusting, but still more or less similar.

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13y ago

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