British and American English: Difference between revisions
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imported>Ro Thorpe No edit summary |
imported>J. Noel Chiappa (→Vocabulary: Add a few (with help from my (American) family.. :-)) |
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!British | !British | ||
!American | !American | ||
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|alumin'''i'''um | |||
|aluminum | |||
|- | |- | ||
|autumn | |autumn | ||
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|curtains | |curtains | ||
|drapes/draperies/curtains | |drapes/draperies/curtains | ||
|- | |||
|dustbin | |||
|trashcan | |||
|- | |- | ||
|film | |film | ||
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|rubber<ref>A pitfall for British visitors to America, where 'rubber' is a vulgar term for a condom.</ref> | |rubber<ref>A pitfall for British visitors to America, where 'rubber' is a vulgar term for a condom.</ref> | ||
|eraser | |eraser | ||
|- | |||
|spanner | |||
|wrench | |||
|- | |- | ||
|sweets | |sweets | ||
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|sweetshop | |sweetshop | ||
|candy store | |candy store | ||
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|tin | |||
|can | |||
|- | |- | ||
|trousers | |trousers |
Revision as of 20:37, 19 March 2008
This article examines the differences between British and American English in the areas of vocabulary, spelling and phonology.
Vocabulary
Lexical differences are:
British | American |
---|---|
aluminium | aluminum |
autumn | autumn/fall |
car-park | parking lot |
chips | (French/french) fries [1] |
condom | condom/rubber (vulgar slang) |
crisps | potato chips |
curtains | drapes/draperies/curtains |
dustbin | trashcan |
film | movie [2] |
flat | flat/apartment[3] |
(Association) football | soccer |
lift | elevator |
full stop | period |
lorry/truck[4] | truck |
nappy | diaper |
off-licence | liquor store |
pants | underwear/underpants |
pavement | sidewalk |
petrol | gasoline/gas |
road | road/pavement |
rubber[5] | eraser |
spanner | wrench |
sweets | candy |
sweetshop | candy store |
tin | can |
trousers | trousers/pants |
Spelling
The most striking differences between the spelling of AmE and BrE are in these suffixes (the accents show stress and pronunciation, see English phonemes):
British | - | American | - |
---|---|---|---|
-ence | defénce | -ense | defénse |
offénce | offénse[6] | ||
lîcence noun[7] | lîcense |
Notes
- ↑ Though strictly, these are two different shapes, chips being broader than fries.
- ↑ ‘Movie’ is nowadays normal in BrE when talking Hollywood.
- ↑ Increasingly heard in British English; in San Francisco, California, at least, a city of small, shared buildings, both "flat" and "apartment" are used, mostly interchangeably. Purists, however, distinguish between the two: an "apartment" is in a building that has a shared main entrance; a "flat" has its own outside entrance door.
- ↑ British trucks are traditionally small, and pulled, typically on rails.
- ↑ A pitfall for British visitors to America, where 'rubber' is a vulgar term for a condom.
- ↑ In American sporting contexts, one may hear óffénse and dêfénse.
- ↑ lîcense is the verb in BrE, cf. licensêe in both. Mostly -ence is used in both, as with fénce; but sénse, dénse and suspénse in both.