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UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Reading various forums and TW multiplayer foyers made me realize how different UK grammar is from US grammar. The ones we are pretty much aware of is the spelling and what we call certain things. Examples would be 'honour' vs. 'honor' and 'valour' vs. 'valor', or how we call things such as 'football' vs. 'soccer' and 'lift' vs. 'elevator'.
I noticed more differences from novels. The British use single quotes (') while the Americans use double quotes (") when quoting a character. Examples:
'I went there,' she said.
"I went there," she said.
What confuses me is that old British novels used double quotes.-> http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/IS...gamesA/#reader Maybe it's because the book in that link is an American version. I'll check Tolkien's books.
I wonder. Do the British and the Americans get annoyed when they see grammar different from their's? Also, what are the other differences in English grammar? And what about Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa? I started to be aware (and worry) of how I write in English when I started to chat with the world.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Shaka_Khan
Do the British and the Americans get annoyed when they see grammar different from their's?
Or, perhaps more importantly, is this apostrophe correctly placed?
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Australia does the language correctly.
We speak Australian.
Its "text" a single is more a double used. Used to be the other way around, but has changed, I was informed.
Its gray. Gray is a colour.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Grammar... whatever MS Office says is correct is correct of course. So in NSW because the primary school teachers cannot figure out how to change the region to Australia, it is kept to the default of American English.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Papewaio
Grammar... whatever MS Office says is correct is correct of course. So in NSW because the primary school teachers cannot figure out how to change the region to Australia, it is kept to the default of American English.
That's hilarious :laugh4:
Anyone who cares about grammar and spelling to that degree needs to chill out.
And yeah, obviously American grammar is the correct version.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Shaka_Khan
What confuses me is that old British novels used double quotes
Yes, and British also began using the 's' instead of 'z' (ise vs ize) which is a French influence, in the late 1900s. Oxford English still retains the original spelling. I personally prefer British English, and that is what they taught me in Russia, where I spent the majority of my life.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Sasaki Kojiro
That's hilarious :laugh4:
Anyone who cares about grammar and spelling to that degree needs to chill out.
And yeah, obviously American grammar is the correct version.
I actually don't mind if we choose a grammar set for a reason. I do mind choosing one out of a lack of interest, stupidity or lack of motivation as displayed by said "'teachers'".
And yes primary school teachers who teach the basics should care about spelling and grammar. However most schools do not explicitly teach English grammar as it is assumed that one will absorb it in an English speaking society.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Shaka_Khan
I wonder. Do the British and the Americans get annoyed when they see grammar different from their's?
I can't speak for the British but every American I know rages out when they see the difference.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
I use American and British English interchangeably, I've never been bothered by either.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
It always seems the British folks get most perturbed because we don't use superfluous 'u's and the like.
CR
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
pevergreen
Australia does the language correctly.
No we don't. We spell "jail" as "gaol".
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Proletariat
I can't speak for the British but every American I know rages out when they see the difference.
The British rage inside. The perceptive will note a slight twitching of the upper lip in the more excitable of young women.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
CountArach
No we don't. We spell "jail" as "gaol".
Gaol is correct. It's the difference between Jeffrey and Geoffrey. I mean, c'mon, Jeffrey Chaucer dunt really cut it, does it? :laugh4:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
There's a difference?:inquisitive:
I usually speak Estonian English(English with many many many spelling mistakes) and I'm proud of it!:smash:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Crazed Rabbit
It always seems the British folks get most pertrbed because we don't use sperflos 'u's and the like.
CR
I don't actually mind how people spell words, as long as it's correct in their country.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Pannonian
I don't actually mind houw people spell words, as long as it's correct in their cuountry.
I suppose you're the exception that proves the rule.
CR
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
CountArach
No we don't. We spell "jail" as "gaol".
Interchangeble.
We don't give enough of a crap.
You write it and if you can read it, its good enough.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Evil_Maniac From Mars
Or, perhaps more importantly, is this apostrophe correctly placed?
Of course not. I just recently explained it to a good orgah friend via PM, being the grammar nazi that I am and I can do it here again:
boat - singular
boats - plural
boat's - genitive singular ("the boat's deck" meaning the deck belonging to the boat)
boats' - genitive plural
The above is obviously a progressive pronoun which I actually didn't know myself but I knew you leave the apostrophe out, which is all that counts. :laugh4: :sweatdrop:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wakizashi
I use American and British English interchangeably, I've never been bothered by either.
So do I, we shortly talked about the differences at school I think and our teachers mostly just said we should decide for one and be consistent, which I'm not, I often decide for the British though, possibly because I just like to hear them speak. :laugh4:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
I doubt either version is correct and I doubt most people really care (I don't). The missing letter 'u' is wrong, not sure where that originates, but apart from that both versions of english have diversified from their roots. It's the same as the pronunciation of c in Spain. If you go to South America it's pronounced normally, like an s, and not with the lisp sound. The South American version is closer to the original Spanish, where the Spanish version evolved separately.
:bow:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Asai Nagamasa
I doubt either version is correct and I doubt most people really care (I don't). The missing letter 'u' is wrong, not sure where that originates, but apart from that both versions of english have diversified from their roots. It's the same as the pronunciation of c in Spain. If you go to South America it's pronounced normally, like an s, and not with the lisp sound. The South American version is closer to the original Spanish, where the Spanish version evolved separately.
:bow:
The original root of English was correct, but over the years we developed an even more correct version of English, and with each passing day we correct it even more. The Americans, sadly, have decided not to follow our progress, and are thus left behind in the linguistic race.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
I think the English have the final say on this, because afterall, it is called English.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
We were taught "British English" in secondary school.
Nowadays, I probably use both "American English" and "British English" without realising which English I'm using, since I'm not a native speaker.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Errbody need tha chill aight? Yall kno we borrowed words from da Romans? Errthang is correct and we just gotta learn da difference and enlightenize ourselves.
Edit - English is the most inconsistent language that I know of when it comes to grammar and pronunciation. I was walking down the street wearing my new pair of shoes while eating pear.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Here we seem to be swifting from UK english to US english. When I was in school we had to talk with a british accent, which I always refused, I am Dutch not English so I speak English with a big fat Dutch accent and they can understand me just fine.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Who cares about small minority variants of English, like British or American? :book:
Europe alone has more English speakers than the entire Anglophone world. So does India.
So we'll take it from here, thank you very much.
English will develop further as a minority dialect in Britain and the US. Just like Latin evolved into minority dialects in Rome and Milan, variants that soon were mutually unintelligable to each other. Italian dialects that soon were useless in the world at large.
Meanwhile, the civilized world took over Latin from them. Then build a pan-European civilization around it for the next 1500 years. This is the future of English too. Soon, the English and Americans will have the disadvantage of speaking a useless minority variant while four billion others will speak the global standard English.
(Revenge is ours, we'll beat you at your own game, serves you right for picking the wrong language as the global standard etc etc)
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fragony
Here we seem to be swifting from UK english to US english. When I was in school we had to talk with a british accent, which I always refused, I am Dutch not English so I speak English with a big fat Dutch accent and they can understand me just fine.
That's just rude. You should always make an effort to adopt the accent of your listener. Follow the admirable example of Shteve Mclaren.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Louis VI the Fat
Who cares about small minority variants of English, like British or American? :book:
Europe alone has more English speakers than the entire Anglophone world. So does India.
So we'll take it from here, thank you very much.
English will develop further as a minority dialect in Britain and the US. Just like Latin evolved into minority dialects in Rome and Milan, variants that soon were mutually incomprehensible to each other.
Meanwhile, the civilized world took over Latin from them. Then build a pan-European civilization around it for the next 1500 years. This is the future of English too. Soon, the English and Americans will have the disadvantage of speaking a useless minority variant while four billion others will speak the global standard English.
(Revenge is ours, we'll beat you at your own game, serves you right for picking the wrong language as the global standard etc etc)
and there's more English speakers in China than in the rest of the world put together. Weep you Francophones. :whip: :yes:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Pannonian
That's just rude. You should always make an effort to adopt the accent of your listener. Follow the admirable example of Shteve Mclaren.
If they have a problem with that then that's their problem. Not going to talk as if I have a hot potato stuck in my throat.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Fragony
If they have a problem with that then that's their problem. Not going to talk as if I have a hot potato stuck in my throat.
An old freind of mine from Aalsmeer said exactley that. Talking English was like talking with a hot potato in his mouth. Serves you all right. :laugh4:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
There is another mechanism.
Frenchmen with little education speak American English. (Or no English at all) Highly educated Frenchmen use British English. It is all to do with status.
Even if my English is a potpourri of British, American and other variants, whenever aware of it I will use British spelling and vocabulary. Not to impress the English speakers, or to make myself better understood to them - but to distinguish myself as a person of education and higher cultural norms to other non-native speakers. :yes:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Louis VI the Fat
There is another mechanism.
Frenchmen with little education speak American English. (Or no English at all) Highly educated Frenchmen use British English. It is all to do with status.
Even if my English is a potpourri of British, American and other variants, whenever aware of it I will use British spelling and vocabulary. Not to impress the English speakers, or to make myself better understood to them - but to distinguish myself as a person of education and higher cultural norms to other non-native speakers. :yes:
I need to borrow a pair of Strike's boots before walking through that post.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
HA we don't have any use for that we are Dutch that is our usual state, highly educated and culturally refined, and if you don't apreciate our higher cultural norms you can sit on it and spin suck it up and spit it out.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Fragony
HA we don't have any ush for that we are Dutch that ish our husual shtate, highly educated and culturally refined, and if you don't aprecshiate our higher cultural normsh you can shit on it and shpin shuck it up and shpit it out.
Admit it, you talk English like that. All you Dutcsh do. :laugh4:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Vladimir
I need to borrow a pair of Strike's boots before walking through that post.
Go on then! Have at it! :beam:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
InsaneApache
Admit it, you talk English like that. All you Dutcsh do. :laugh4:
HA I speak 5 languages like that :smug:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Scottish accent is my personal favorite flavor of English. The U.S. midwestern is of course the gold standard, but Scottish is just plain fun.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Proletariat
I can't speak for the British but every American I know rages out when they see the difference.
British spellings are pretty much the only things which differentiate "us" from "you", so one's nationalist, patriotic spirit is roused when we see "color".
Also, Humour > Humor.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fragony
HA we don't have any use for that we are Dutch that is our usual state, highly educated and culturally refined, and if you don't apreciate our higher cultural norms you can sit on it and spin suck it up and spit it out.
Pah, Dutch is just a mish-mash between German and English.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
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Originally Posted by
Subotan
Pah, Dutch is just a mish-mash between German and English.
Without actually being German or English. Small place, big world.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
I don't care if overseas people spell words wrong differently, but I do get annoyed if they say my spelling is wrong.
Another difference is in the spelling of Centre, litre, metre.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rvg
Scottish accent is my personal favorite flavor of English. The U.S. midwestern is of course the gold standard, but Scottish is just plain fun.
I'd love to be a Scottish standup comedian ~D
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Louis is right: the world is quite rapidly shifting towards the ‘Asian English’ by which I mean the English as commonly found in manuals and PR-material of Asian consumer goods manufacturers. That's the kind of grammar which does away with all possible cause for confusion by simply omitting all of it. On the upside they do introduce a far more rich phonology to English: namely the Asian accent.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
In most part of the world where I have been to, English English is seen as more classy. Usualy, the lower classes speaks more American English, while educated people speak English English.
I, for one, much prefer the English version...
My girlfriend speaks this perfectly accented brittish that the educated class in England speaks, I find it extremly sexy.
Specially compared to, say, the broad dialect in Texas or such. I dunno, it just doesnt have much class.
Sorry SFTS, nothing personal ;)
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tellos Athenaios
Louis is right: the world is quite rapidly shifting towards the ‘Asian English’ by which I mean the English as commonly found in manuals and PR-material of Asian consumer goods manufacturers. That's the kind of grammar which does away with all possible cause for confusion by simply omitting all of it. On the upside they do introduce a far more rich phonology to English: namely the Asian accent.
Ah, but which Asian English should prevail? East Asian, based on Japanese English and to a lesser extent Chinese English, or South Asian, based on Indian English?
Thinking about it, I think Indian English has British English as its standard, so it's not really an autonomous dialect after all. East Asian English has all sorts of fun with undefined determiners that lose seven degrees of sense when translated back and forth. One doesn't understand how common and important the is until one has tried to make sense of a Jap-English lyric.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Let the Euros learn whatever kinds of pidgin english they prefer. In the end, we'll screw everyone over and switch to Spanish.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
I use British spelling to distinguish myself on teh intrawebz. I believe I speak American English, which is opposed to speaking with an accent.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tellos Athenaios
Louis is right: the world is quite rapidly shifting towards the ‘Asian English’ by which I mean the English as commonly found in manuals and PR-material of Asian consumer goods manufacturers. That's the kind of grammar which does away with all possible cause for confusion by simply omitting all of it. On the upside they do introduce a far more rich phonology to English: namely the Asian accent.
Rich phonology will be the death of English, the extreme lack of inflection and limited phonological range are what make the language malleable and intelligable through a variety of accents. If you introduce subtleties it will be like learning Welsh!
How the Welsh manage I don't know, well actually they don't; they have a different written standard that bears no relation to any modern spoken form.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Louis VI the Fat
There is another mechanism.
Frenchmen with little education speak American English. (Or no English at all) Highly educated Frenchmen use British English. It is all to do with status.
Even if my English is a potpourri of British, American and other variants, whenever aware of it I will use British spelling and vocabulary. Not to impress the English speakers, or to make myself better understood to them - but to distinguish myself as a person of education and higher cultural norms to other non-native speakers. :yes:
This is exactly the same in England, "Standard" English is really South Midlands stripped of most of it's peculiarities. It is the language of Crown Clerks (Chancery Standard) and thence out modern politicians. Queen's English (as spoken by the aristocracy) is actually different, and I don't find it that attractive. One is a mark of education, the other of Class.
My own accent is primarily Surrey-based (my Father's) with moderations from my Mother's coarser rural Hampshire and a (surprisingly few) articles from my upbringing in Devon.
In the Provinces, people speak with an accent closer to an Eastern American in general, but different in particulars.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fragony
Without actually being German or English. Small place, big world.
Touché. :bow:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
I remember in High School I used to write words like "Gaol", "Tyr", "Cheque", and "Aluminium" just to piss on my English Teacher's shoes, so-to-speak.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wakizashi
I remember in High School I used to write words like "Gaol", "Tyr", "Cheque", and "Aluminium" just to piss on my English Teacher's shoes, so-to-speak.
Yeah, all those words piss me off immensely. Especially "cheque". For God's sake, people, write in English.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Shaka_Khan
I wonder. Do the British and the Americans get annoyed when they see grammar different from their's? Also, what are the other differences in English grammar? And what about Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa? I started to be aware (and worry) of how I write in English when I started to chat with the world.
Well, I'm currently studying linguistics, and I find the differences fascinating. Another interesting one: after a coronal consonant (one pronounced with the tip of the tongue), American English does not allow the diphthong [iu]. You'll find it after other American consonants (huge, cute, pure, beauty), but not after coronals. British English does allow [iu] after coronals, however, hence the different pronunciations of words like news, tune, lurid, presume, and suit.
Anyway, if you're interested in finding more differences, you can check this out:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America...sh_differences
Ajax
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miotas
Another difference is in the spelling of Centre, litre, metre.
Oh yes, those are the ones where I got for the american spelling of center, meter, liter because that's exactly the german spelling as well and I don't understand why they do it wrong in Britain... :inquisitive:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Husar
Oh yes, those are the ones where I got for the american spelling of center, meter, liter because that's exactly the german spelling as well and I don't understand why they do it wrong in Britain... :inquisitive:
It looks better that way. Also, I dunno about other English speakers, but "re" makes me says a shorter "r" sound than "er".
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Subotan
It looks bettre that way. Also, I dunno about other English speakres, but "re" makes me says a shortre "r" sound than "er".
Fixed :laugh4:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Husar
Oh yes, those are the ones where I got for the american spelling of center, meter, liter because that's exactly the german spelling as well and I don't understand why they do it wrong in Britain... :inquisitive:
The British spell it as 'centre, metre, etc' to honour their cultural overlords from whom they aquired these concepts. :book:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
I use the English English (even changing the keyboard set-up) in support of our unfortunate cousins who forget their French, in their desperate fight to look as independent country from the USA.
It is probably their only remaining independent path from the USA.
Until when the US will tolerate it is another question…?:inquisitive:
“Rule Britannia, Rule on the waves” (the sound ones, at least).
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
So far, American English is far more useful and informative than any other variation of the language. Just look at the little gem known as "y'all". Perfectly addresses a small deficiency in the simplest and most elegant way.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
InsaneApache
Admit it, you talk English like that. All you Dutcsh do. :laugh4:
And yet when I met The Stranger I found that he had quite a british accent for a dutchman.
Just be thankful us aussies don't type in an aussie accent.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Subotan
It looks better that way. Also, I dunno about other English speakers, but "re" makes me says a shorter "r" sound than "er".
I type it that way as well, mostly for aesthetic purposes.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
There was a band called "The Meters" but there was never a band called "The Metres"
so therefore the correct spelling has now been confirmed. :egypt:
Oh, and it is Half and aitch not 'alf and haitch.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
We ALL know that it is only the words that matters, not the thought behind it!
As an example... I could (in this forum) say that the swedish people in general is rapist killers who should not be allowed to exist*.
That would not be blatant racism. However, damn me if I say the F-word
or the N-word.
* I could have a rant about vikings about this, if I set all science aside ;)
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rvg
Yeah, all those words piss me off immensely. Especially "cheque". For God's sake, people, write in English.
It comes from the chequer board. As does the UK finance minister. The Chancellor of the Exchequer.
I don't know. :book:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
In England, you ask for the cheque and pay with a bill. In America, you ask for the bill and pay with a check.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Usually you ask for the check and pay with a credit card :sweatdrop:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Ask for the bill, get disgusted at how much it costs, inform waiter that we shoulda stayed home and thrown another snag or two on the barbie for half the bloody price and it would have tasted better and why does this place support collingwood, thats silly, this is queensland dammit.
Then pay and leave.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Kadagar_AV
Oh that is SO bad!
We ALL know that it is only the words that matters, not the thought behind it!
As an example... I could (in this forum) say that the swedish people in general is rapist killers who should not be allowed to exist*.
That would not be blatant racism. However, damn me if I say the F-word
or the N-word.
Hey, do not laugh at me :P. I have gotten infraction for literally everything you can possibly get in this place. I have gotten infractions for the usage of uncensored profanity do demonstrate its usage, I have gotten infractions when quoting a famous person's profanity, I have used profanity with all but the first letter obscured and got an infraction for that (I said "f" and then ": daisy :").
In other words, regardless of what my opinion is on the rules, I try follow them, and I am not taking any chances.
Plus, it is often difficult to understand what the thoughts behind the words are on the Internet, as all you see is the words; the letters. In RL the tone, pitch, loudness, the facial expression, the other body language signs can make things obvious that are not so on the Net. Once again, do not laugh at me - I do not make the rules :shrug:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quite correct, yet there are ways.
eg:
I ******* hate you!
against
I :daisy: hate you! :clown:
Which one would you take in jest?
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ajaxfetish
Well, I'm currently studying linguistics, and I find the differences fascinating. Another interesting one: after a coronal consonant (one pronounced with the tip of the tongue), American English does not allow the diphthong [iu]. You'll find it after other American consonants (huge, cute, pure, beauty), but not after coronals. British English does allow [iu] after coronals, however, hence the different pronunciations of words like news, tune, lurid, presume, and suit.
Anyway, if you're interested in finding more differences, you can check this out:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America...sh_differences
Ajax
Thanks.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
In America, you ask for the bill and pay with a check.
Where i'm from we always say "check please!" when we're done eating at a restaurant.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Well I thought that I knew most of the differences, but I never knew you guys write check. Also, when I see the american spellings I always think that it's how a young child would write before they learn how to spell properly, especially airplane.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rvg
Just look at the little gem known as "y'all". Perfectly addresses a small deficiency in the simplest and most elegant way.
What about youse?
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miotas
What about youse?
Equally awesome. Also cool is the distinction between y'all and all y'all, and between yous and yous guys.
Ajax
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ajaxfetish
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miotas
What about youse?
Equally awesome. Also cool is the distinction between y'all and all y'all, and between you
s and you
s guys.
Ajax
Yet another spelling difference.
:laugh4:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miotas
Well I thought that I knew most of the differences, but I never knew you guys write check. Also, when I see the american spellings I always think that it's how a young child would write before they learn how to spell properly, especially airplane.
The word aeroplane is an abomination. Airplane is much more concise, to the point, and doesn't remind me of low quality chocolate.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Evil_Maniac From Mars
The word aeroplane is an abomination. Airplane is much more concise, to the point, and doesn't remind me of low quality chocolate.
Well aeroplane reminds me of jelly(I mean jelly, not jam), but airplane seriously makes me think of a 2 year old who can't get their mouth around aeroplane.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
America has so many accents it's not even funny.
Like how people from Massachusetts say "cahh pahk" instead of "car park".
and "hahhba" instead of "harbor".
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Britain has more, you know, because it's older.
Same with any European country. I hear Swabians are entirely incomprehensible to Northerners.
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
A Very Super Market
Same with any European country. I hear Swabians are entirely incomprehensible to Northerners.
Forget German, you've never heard anyone from the depths of Oberbayern speaking English. :2thumbsup:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miotas
Yet another spelling difference.
:laugh4:
Honestly, not being from New York, I have no idea how a proper Brooklyner would spell it. My thinking was that adding only -s would emphasize the relationship to the plural -s suffix, but I didn't want to alter your quote*.
Ajax
*(there's another difference btw: the use of either quote or quotation as a noun in American English, while if I'm correctly informed only quotation is allowed as a noun in British English)
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
This discussion is not an opportunity for disruptive members to test the boundaries of the rules.
Some have fallen foul. Others will follow in short order. :beadyeyes:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Louis VI the Fat
The British spell it as 'centre, metre, etc' to honour their cultural overlords from whom they aquired these concepts. :book:
I know that, the concepts are nice and I like them, however I'm of the opinion that these cultural overlords have a big gap between what they say and what they write and should thus not be taken very seriously concerning what they write, talk about superfluous letters at the end of every second word, not to mention that when you say "er" it would make sense to write "er" instead of "re". In the case of the cultural overlords I wouldn't be surprised if they write "centre" and say "cent" because they always leave half the word out when they say it. :inquisitive:
Well, one can't excel in everything, the measurement system itself is quite ingenious IMO. :2thumbsup:
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Re: UK English Grammar vs. US English Grammar
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Evil_Maniac From Mars
Forget German, you've never heard anyone from the depths of Oberbayern speaking English. :2thumbsup:
Just for reference:
English: Hello, I'm Peter and I come from Munich.
Hochdeutsch (Normal German): Hallo, ich bin Peter und ich komme aus München.
Bavarian: Habèderè, i bî da Pèda und kumm vo Minga.
:dizzy2: