All this is difficult to put into words and try to explain. But...
'Style' in photography - what is that? Many of us have no end of difficulty to explain it, which may be why we often confuse it with 'technique', or the mechanics of doing what we do.
Technique - that gawdawful topic too many photography students back in the '70s and '80s would bore the pants off the rest of us in trying to explain the mistakes they made in shooting their class subjects, not really understanding the basics of what they wanted to do and were doing, mostly focused on hipster fame and big money but lacking the life experience to see much of anything. Most of these young wannabees are now long gone from the scene and the few I occasionally run into say they no longer shoot or even own a camera - which perhaps says it all for the illusions they had back in the day, whether they called it style or technique.
Back to style. Me, if I have any beyond shooting mostly documentary images, I would have to say I have two distinct styles or techniques or whatever - never mind the definitions.
The first is from my architectural training (I'm now retired from this profession). We architects tend to think in grids, so the images I make from this school of - whatever - tend to have all the verticals perfectly verticals. Too bad about the horizontals, this being the product of shooting mostly full frame digital with my Nikon D800 and a 28mm lens. They look after themselves, the horizons.
My clients like these images, and now and then they buy them - otherwise they tend to bore the pants off most casual viewers, so I rarely show them to anyone except fellow architects (also mostly retired or unemployed) and publishers.
The second is my more loose, free, taken from the hip and on the go style, similar to Calzone's (see #27) and, I think, ideally defined in those beaut images posted by Rich C (see #30). Both (also many others on RFF) truly excel at what they do, but the latter seems to me to have combined the best of the two (style and technique) and fused them together into images that look arty, visually striking, and meaningful - which is about the best any photographer can ever aspire to.
As for me, my 'looser' images are for my amusement and satisfaction and draw heavily from my 1960s photojournalist period (greatly influenced by Life magazine of the era), my travels in the '60s and '70s, my younger life and a gritty, off-the-cuff approach using B&W film, my ageing Nikkormats and two F-era prime lenses, (mostly) a 35 2.0 and (rarely) a 50 1.4.
Most everyone I know likes these images, but for reasons I really don't understand I rarely show them, only now and then to my partner, my best (and most stringent and vocal) critic.
So. to sum up all this, do I have a 'style'? I don't know. Probably not. If 'style' is what I do, then yes, I have a 'style'.
As for my 'technique', well, remembering the 1970s and 1980s, I will respectfully spare you all that.