Forget simply calling a pub by its given name. That's for the hoi polloi, darling. A true Sloane understood that the Admiral Codrington in Chelsea wasn't just "The Admiral." No, no, it was "The Cod." Because, clearly, a three-syllable word is simply too much effort when one is juggling a gin and tonic and the latest gossip about who married whom (and how dreadfully they're still living north of the river).
This wasn't just laziness; it was a subtle, almost secret handshake. A linguistic barrier designed to keep the riff-raff out, or at least, hopelessly confused. If you didn't know "The Cod" or that "The Sloaney Pony" was actually the White Horse in Fulham, then you simply weren't "in." It cemented their shared social universe, a cozy echo chamber where everyone spoke the same coded language, perfectly content in their perfectly polished, utterly insular world. Bless their cotton socks.