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Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 12:39 pm
by jarndice
Is there any particular reason why the inbuilt spellchecker on the Forum is set up to accept American English spelling rather than English English Spelling ?
I get a bit fed up when my spelling of Colour for instance is marked as an error when patently it is no such thing.

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 1:12 pm
by Kaczor
Spelling is checked not by forum but browser.

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 1:41 pm
by jarndice
Kaczor wrote:Spelling is checked not by forum but browser.
WHOSE ???
Certainly not mine.

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 2:11 pm
by Jimster
I’ve always wondered why we renegade colonists dropped the “u” and spell it color. And why in the heck is aluminum pronounced so wrong in England? And who ever thought knife needed to begin the letter “k”?!

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 3:14 pm
by silversurfer1947
Jimster wrote:I’ve always wondered why we renegade colonists dropped the “u” and spell it color. And why in the heck is aluminum pronounced so wrong in England? And who ever thought knife needed to begin the letter “k”?!
I guess aluminium was named thus by English chemist, Humphrey Davy to match all the other elements ending in ium. The question is why did our transatlantic cousins choose to drop the final i in aluminium but leave it in all the other elements? Could have been interesting if they had done the same with sodium!

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 3:15 pm
by Son of a gun-ner
There's nothing wrong with the English English language, it's other people that can't cope with it.

It's easy, and you will get along fine, if you remember things like. . . .

Read and lead rhyme and read and lead rhyme, but read and lead don't rhyme, and neither do read and lead. See, simple :D

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 3:22 pm
by rochesb
Two countries, divided by a common language ........

I always found the American use of momentarily confusing...... in the USA it means something will happen in a moment (shortly) whereas in England it means something will happen for a short duration of time.....

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 3:23 pm
by Son of a gun-ner
By the way Shaun, you may want to edit your threads title from grammer to grammar :haha:

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 5:19 pm
by Max-U52
jarndice wrote:Is there any particular reason why the inbuilt spellchecker on the Forum is set up to accept American English spelling rather than English English Spelling ?
I get a bit fed up when my spelling of Colour for instance is marked as an error when patently it is no such thing.
That's easy. The spellchecker knows that Americans are the Greatest so it's sucking up to us. Bwahahaha @) @)

Re: Grammer.

Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 9:32 pm
by silversurfer1947
I can remember a folk concert by the Watersons back in my university days. They were accounting a concert they had given in the US. One of the problems they had was that in America, when someone was randy, it merely meant that his parents had christened him Randolph. There were other examples which were sorely lost in translation, but they have escaped my memory.

On a different topic, why can't our transatlantic friends pronounce laboratory correctly? They always make it sound like what they euphemistically call the bathroom.