British spellings in the US (or why color/colour?)

OT: anything goes!

Moderator: Edi

User avatar
Admiral Valdemar
Outside Context Problem
Posts: 31572
Joined: 2002-07-04 07:17pm
Location: UK

Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Andrew J. wrote:
Admiral Valdemar wrote:
Andrew J. wrote:What about sticking vowels next to other vowels where they clearly do not belong: encyclopaedia, aeon, etc?

Writing dates numerically is just like writing the whole thing out: September 11th, 2001, thus 9/11/01. (Saying "The eleventh of September" is passive voice, and therefore wimpy.)

And pudding is a dessert with a gooey consistency, not some sort of meat, dammit! :P
Why not go the whole hog and speak l33t liek Jeff K?

R u afraid ull luk sily??!?!?

The English language is as it is because it was made that way for hundreds of years. Hell, why not go back to pure phonetic spelling again where any word that sounds the same can be spelt different in one sentence at least twice. People did it all the time.

English is officially spelt the way it is, deal with it.
Erm...that's not how it's spelled here, so I don't have
to deal with it. Americans are just fine with eons and encyclopedias.

Oh, and that reminds me; another thing that annoys me (not related the whole English-American dialect thing, necessarily) is words that have multiple past-tense versions. Spelled spelt, spilled spilt, and I can never remember if both are correct or if I'm just imagining things.



Uh...there aren't any places where it's legal to shoot an Irishman, are there?
Meh, I was referring to the fact that the official language is that way, only America uses otherwise.

And English is like that with the past tense clauses etc. Really this should all be understoof in secondary education, as bad as English can be at times, I much prefer it to other languages.
User avatar
Keevan_Colton
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 10355
Joined: 2002-12-30 08:57pm
Location: In the Land of Logic and Reason, two doors down from Lilliput and across the road from Atlantis...
Contact:

Post by Keevan_Colton »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:
kheegan wrote:
Ted wrote: Well, Guy Fawkes came from York, plus its got the National Railway Museum there, so it aint all bad.

Plus, it's legal for an Englishman to shoot a Scotsman with a bow and arrow on Sundays! 8)
Now that's an interesting form of weekend entertainment...
The hasn't been repealed so it's legit.

*Grabs longbow*
Thats part of why I'm not visiting York...
Johonebesus
Jedi Master
Posts: 1487
Joined: 2002-07-06 11:26pm

Post by Johonebesus »

aerius wrote:As a Canadian I happen to mix and match spellings the same way I do with Imperial and Metric measures.
When you, or other Canadians, use gallons instead of liters, do you ever get confused with Imperial and U.S. Customary?
Post Reply