Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 --- Pugh <gramlin@...> wrote: > > The " correct " version of English, in England is > called " Queen's English " or ( " Kings English, > depending who is on the throne). Usually the > newscasters on the BBC (British Broadcasting > Corporation) can be relied upon to speak English > correctly. > Apologies if my last post came through half finished - cat decided to walk across the keyboard and it disappeared from my screen... I disagree. The Queen's English is what I speak, that's my dialect, although not necessarily with the same accent as the Queen. But that doesn't mean that other dialects are wrong. The BBC no longer broadcasts in just the Queens English, but makes an effort to ensure all regional differences are represented, because there is no " right " one. When the English settled in America (was it 15th Century?) the language was influenced by different things on each continent (America and Europe). It's perfectly natural that differences developed between them. That doesn't mean that American English isn't English, it's just different from British English, and there's nothing wrong with that. In the same way that Yorkshire english is different from London English which is different from ish english. They are all valid and correct. (For my birthday I got a tongue-in-cheek Yorkshire/English, English/Yorkshire dictionary, I speak English, but have lived in Yorkshire for 11 years!) I am a stickler for grammar though - the rules override all dialects and vocabulary and should be applied consistently. Just my 2p! Jo ___________________________________________________________ BT Broadband - Free modem offer, sign up online today and save £80 http://bt..co.uk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 But our penchant for " bastardizing " the English language makes it very colorful. And real beastie for a non-English speaking person to learn. Judith Alta -----Original Message----- >There is no single " correct " version of English; there are only hundreds of different dialects that are each 100% correct within their community of speaker/users. I don't think that is true. Just because Americans tend to bastardize the english language doesn't make it " correct " it's wrong and it makes me cringe. IMO it should be referred to as the " American language " and then, maybe, it could be forgiven. The " correct " version of English, in England is called " Queen's English " or ( " Kings English, depending who is on the throne). Usually the newscasters on the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) can be relied upon to speak English correctly. So now you know ;-) and the K9's Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 At 10:55 PM 2/1/04 +0000, Jo wrote: >I am a stickler for grammar though - the rules >override all dialects and vocabulary and should be >applied consistently. Agreed. 's prior reference to things that make her cringe made me think of grammar - that's what I think of when I hear " American bastardization of the language " . Not that I use perfect grammar myself, of course ... but hearing people say " being as ... such and such " instead of something like " since ... such and such " makes me look around for anything sharp that can be used as a missile weapon in a pinch. Which, of course, has nothing to do with Linguistics 101, but was fun to type anyway. MFJ Any moment in which you feel like dancing is a perfect moment. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 --- mfjewett <mfjewett@...> wrote: > Not that I use > perfect grammar myself, > of course ... but hearing people say " being as ... > such and such " instead > of something like " since ... such and such " makes me > look around for > anything sharp that can be used as a missile weapon > in a pinch. > " DId you do that yet " ? is my pet hate - No-one in England says that! Should be " Have you done that yet " . Jo Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 How about " I and her went. . . " That was a favorite of my hubby's family. Or this one: " The person that. . . " People are " who " animals and inanimate objects are " that. " Both of my parents were teachers, and that helps me very much, but I'm still far from perfect. Judith Alta -----Original Message----- From: Joanne Pollack [mailto:jopollack2001@...] --- mfjewett <mfjewett@...> wrote: > Not that I use > perfect grammar myself, > of course ... but hearing people say " being as ... > such and such " instead > of something like " since ... such and such " makes me > look around for > anything sharp that can be used as a missile weapon > in a pinch. > " DId you do that yet " ? is my pet hate - No-one in England says that! Should be " Have you done that yet " . Jo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Mike/: > >There is no single " correct " version of English; there > are only hundreds of different dialects that are each 100% correct > within their community of speaker/users. > > I don't think that is true. @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Well, I could just say " sorry, but it is true, and unless you have graduate-level study and research experience in the scientific study of language than you're way out of your league to make claims on the matter " , but that answer would be a bit rude and lazy, and I'm not known for taking the easy way out. A much better answer goes as follows. " correct " does involve an element of subjectivity, so if you decide that there is a particular dialect of English you'd like to single out as the " correct " one, then by all means it **is** " correct " **in your version of the world**. You'll even be able to find a small group of people who will wholeheartedly agree with you. Nevertheless, a much much larger group of people will then proceed to first laugh uncontrollably and second demonstrate in dozens of ways that your choice is arbitrary and irrational, and, further, that the premises of even making such a choice is untenable and even unethical. That's the long version of " you're wrong " . @@@@@@@@@@@@@ Just because Americans tend to bastardize the english language doesn't make it " correct " it's wrong and it makes me cringe. IMO it should be referred to as the " American language " and then, maybe, it could be forgiven. @@@@@@@@@@@ First, it must be pointed out that your first sentence here is incoherent. Note that the word " the " means " one and only one (contextually salient) entity " , so there must exist one and only one (contextually salient) " English language " . Is there such an object in the world? The answer is that we could either arbitrarily choose one language (say Yorkshire English for example) and define that as " the English language " , or, alternatively, we could define an abstraction of the common features shared by the various English languages (note plural). The former option is absurd (see above), but the latter option is in fact a common and entirely useful conceptualization, so we'll go with that. Now note the American English is one of the languages that partially defines the entity " the English language " , so it is logically impossible for American English to bastardize " the English language " . Logically impossible by definition. Therefore you are henceforth reprieved from cringing. Please note that such terms as " English " , " American English " , " British English " , " Italian " , " Catalan " , " Polish " , " Hindi " , " Imeraguen " , etc are nothing more than vague and useful abstractions of shared properties of dozens or hundreds of dialects, which themselves are nothing more than vague and useful abstractions of shared properties of dozens or even hundreds of thousands of idiolects, and, well... we're all a little different everyday... We can call things whatever we (a given speech community) like... @@@@@@@@@@@@@ > The " correct " version of English, in England is called " Queen's English " or ( " Kings English, depending who is on the throne). Usually the newscasters on the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) can be relied upon to speak English correctly. @@@@@@@@@@@@ Which queen, which king? Which time period? Also note that even the language commonly accepted as the current " Queen's English " can really be subdivided into multiple dialects, so which dialect of the " Queen's English " ? I'd be willing to bet there are vociferous commentators in England who decry the current version of " Queen's English " as an immoral degeneration of some older version of " Queen's English " that they have chosen as a standard. Please note that BBC newscasts represent a very narrow register of discourse, and hence cannot be used as a basis for defining an entire language, whose scope is obviously all discourse. Will you then select a particular newscaster's private personal everyday speech as the standard? If so, I'm sure you'll come up against some significant linguistic differences in the informal speech of various newscasters, so who's the lucky one? Do I need to go on? I will anyway. If you view non- " Queen's English " dialects of English as incorrect or bastardized versions of your chosen " holy language " , then are you are also denying the genetic cognitive entitlement of human equality for all children born in America, Australia, India, Hong Kong, Canada, Scotland, etc past the date you'd have to choose to define when these other languages broke off from their independent and equal status and became inferior subordinates to your reference standard of " English " . This is the ethno-cultural equivalent of racism. You might want to spend some quality time reflecting on this point before issuing any more glib insults to 99.999999999999% of the world's English speaker-users, past, present, and future. Finally, I bring your attention to the much deeper generalization of this last point. If we were to actually formulate and uniformly apply the logic behind your Theory of Language Morality (any discourse using the word " should " in the prescriptive sense is making a moral claim), then we would arrive at the following hideous conclusion: The first human language (or languages if there were more than one that developed independently) is the gold standard of all human language, and all current and future languages are degenerate bastardizations (notably including " Queen's English " ). I already made this point more concisely in my previous email, but note that " English " has not existed forever, and shares the same parents as German and French, so why don't you view all forms of English as a bastardization of your favorite ancient Viking language? For that matter, let's go back to Sanskrit... Let's go back to Africa... I hope the point is clear by now, but there's plenty more where this came from if you want to try the " historical quality peak " / " complexity " defense... I'd really go to town on that... Mike SE Pennsylvania Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 At 11:21 PM 2/1/04 +0000, you wrote: > " DId you do that yet " ? is my pet hate - No-one in >England says that! Should be " Have you done that >yet " . > >Jo > Actually, in New-England-speak, that would be " Didja doot yet? " In the DC area (which translates to Who-Knows-What-Speak), it would be simply " Didja do it yet? " Although my born-and-raised-Dubliner friend would say either " Haven't you done it yet? " or " Isn't it done then, gobshite? " (oops, is that a bad word?!) MFJ In the clearing stands a boxer .... ~Simon & Garfunkel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 Jo, Nice post from our resident UK language expert! @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ > I am a stickler for grammar though - the rules > override all dialects and vocabulary and should be > applied consistently. > > Just my 2p! > > Jo @@@@@@@@@@@@@ not quite. there can be grammatical differences across dialects just like there are differences in pronunciation, semantics, pragmatics, etc. there are grammatical differences between American and British English, for example. this is too OT; i don't want to get into the details... Mike SE Pennsylvania Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 At 06:33 PM 2/1/04 -0500, you wrote: > Both of my parents were teachers, and that helps me very much, but I'm still > far from perfect. > > Judith Alta Mom was a teacher, so that gives me a certain sensitivity, too. Certainly I use plenty of license (interesting spelling in an attempt to create a written version of a tone of voice is probably my worst failing) .... but even more than grammar, it's the spelling that gets me. I have no patience with 'u', 'ur', etc., nor with essays written using a spell-checker alone. " Tot he " is the most common tupo ... that is something up with which I will not put. MFJ In the clearing stands a boxer .... ~Simon & Garfunkel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 @@@@@@@@@@@@ > Agreed. 's prior reference to things that make her cringe made me > think of grammar - that's what I think of when I hear " American > bastardization of the language " . Not that I use perfect grammar myself, > of course ... but hearing people say " being as ... such and such " instead > of something like " since ... such and such " makes me look around for > anything sharp that can be used as a missile weapon in a pinch. > MFJ @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ both constructions are perfectly wonderful. variety is beautiful. language is a subtle flower grown in the fertile soil of human experience. language, like water, will flow to settle in every dimple or niche its syntax and lexicon will allow it to traverse. Mike SE Pennsylvania Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@ > " DId you do that yet " ? is my pet hate - No-one in > England says that! Should be " Have you done that > yet " . > > Jo @@@@@@@@@@@@@@ two different sentences, two different meanings--should be either one depending on the internal temporal frame of reference in the mind of the speaker at the time of utterance. the tense and aspect are simply different in the two sentences. it's no different than " cat " and " dog " . if you're talking about a cat, then use " cat " ; if you're talking about a dog, use " dog " . Mike SE Pennsylvania Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 @@@@@@@@@@@@@ --- In , " Judith Alta " <jaltak@v...> wrote: > How about " I and her went. . . " That was a favorite of my hubby's family. @@@@@@@@@ indeed, pretty ugly, but " me and her went... " is best, not the common bastardization of English of " her and I went... " that most people are taught to believe is " correct " . of course, it is " correct " if that's what your audience wants to hear, i.e. use it in job interviews, but please skip it in real life. @@@@@@@@@ > Or this one: " The person that. . . " People are " who " animals and inanimate > objects are " that. " @@@@@@@@@@@ not quite. if it were that simple syntacticians wouldn't have a job. " that " cannot be used with non-restrictive (aka appository) relative clauses so if the speaker wants to ensure a restrictive modifier interpretation, " that " is a better choice. of course, " who " is fine too. Mike SE Pennsylvania Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 >Mom was a teacher, so that gives me a certain sensitivity, too. >Certainly I use plenty of license (interesting spelling in an attempt to >create a written version of a tone of voice is probably my worst failing) >... but even more than grammar, it's the spelling that gets me. I have >no patience with 'u', 'ur', etc., nor with essays written using a >spell-checker alone. i don't think being raised by a teacher per se has anything to do with it - but rather the values of person you were raised by. BOTH of my parents were educators as was i (my graduate degree is in education) but i have little tolerance for rigidity about the form of language (ie' spelling, grammar, etc). (ok, well except for the pronunciation of " kefir " <weg>.) frankly spelling and grammar are rather superficial aspects of language, the purpose of which is to *communicate*. form is fine in appropriate situations (job, classroom, etc), but in informal situations, such as email lists like this (and actually in most situations), i think communication is of greater import than spelling or formal grammatical conventions. as has already been mentioned - these things evolve and change over time, making any specific dialect no greater or worse than any other (ie; there is no " correct " dialect of german, english, etc.) historically, the politically or economically dominant group has designated *their* dialect as the " correct " one and those (typically peasants/ " underclass " ) who didn't speak the " correct " dialect were essentially shut out of economic advancement. as such language has been a tool used by the " ruling " class to maintain their position of power. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 At 09:48 PM 2/1/04 -0500, you wrote: >frankly spelling and grammar are rather superficial aspects of language, the >purpose of which is to *communicate*. form is fine in appropriate situations >(job, classroom, etc), but in informal situations, such as email lists like >this (and actually in most situations), i think communication is of greater >import than spelling or formal grammatical conventions. as has already been >mentioned - these things evolve and change over time, making any specific >dialect no greater or worse than any other (ie; there is no " correct " >dialect of german, english, etc.) historically, the politically or >economically dominant group has designated *their* dialect as the " correct " >one and those (typically peasants/ " underclass " ) who didn't speak the > " correct " dialect were essentially shut out of economic advancement. as such >language has been a tool used by the " ruling " class to maintain their >position of power. True, defintely agreed. But I'm stickin' by my pet peeves anyway. :-D The specific example of lists like this being more important for the communication than anything else, yes, absolutely, positively I agree. I mean, where else could you possibly find such a wonderful line as .... " If your poop stinks, you need to do this. " *runs off, desperately trying NOT to add that line to her sig file* MFJ Some days the bear will eat you, some days you'll eat the bear. ~Joan Armatrading Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 It does make a difference. Growing up hearing correct grammar and learning to speak it from the beginning does not denote rigidity. I butcher the language as much as anyone, but when I went to secretarial school in the late 1980s I was very thankful for that upbringing. I don't remember my parents being " rigid " about language. If my brother I phrased things incorrectly were told the correct way with several examples. We were still free to " make merry " with the language when it was obvious that we knew the correct way. My grades in the English class were much better than had I not been raised by teaching parents. Judith Alta -----Original Message----- From: Suze Fisher [mailto:s.fisher22@...] i don't think being raised by a teacher per se has anything to do with it - but rather the values of person you were raised by. BOTH of my parents were educators as was i (my graduate degree is in education) but i have little tolerance for rigidity about the form of language (ie' spelling, grammar, etc). (ok, well except for the pronunciation of " kefir " <weg>.) frankly spelling and grammar are rather superficial aspects of language, the purpose of which is to *communicate*. form is fine in appropriate situations (job, classroom, etc), but in informal situations, such as email lists like this (and actually in most situations), i think communication is of greater import than spelling or formal grammatical conventions. as has already been mentioned - these things evolve and change over time, making any specific dialect no greater or worse than any other (ie; there is no " correct " dialect of german, english, etc.) historically, the politically or economically dominant group has designated *their* dialect as the " correct " one and those (typically peasants/ " underclass " ) who didn't speak the " correct " dialect were essentially shut out of economic advancement. as such language has been a tool used by the " ruling " class to maintain their position of power. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 At 10:04 PM 2/1/04 -0500, you wrote: > My grades in the English class were much better than had I not been raised > by teaching parents. Yep. Makes me wonder what would have happened, had I been raised by a couple of mathemeticians. MFJ Some days the bear will eat you, some days you'll eat the bear. ~Joan Armatrading Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 @@@@@@@@@@ > >both constructions are perfectly wonderful. variety is beautiful. > >language is a subtle flower grown in the fertile soil of human > >experience. language, like water, will flow to settle in every > >dimple or niche its syntax and lexicon will allow it to traverse. > > i just want to say that is so poetic - and quite beautiful. and i agree 100% > and have argued this point on many an occasion, although with far less > poetic eloquence. > > Suze Fisher @@@@@@@@@@@@@ thanks Suze! but i typed so hastily that i want to change part of that message--i think " like water, language will... " is better than " language, like water, will... " because there's only one intonation break instead of two. much smoother... just for the record... and i definitely agree with you about spelling being superficial... and sort of about grammar, but from my point of view even so- called " sloppy " or " informal " grammar is often perfectly valid, but just more reflective of real spoken language instead of abiding by the stilted conventions of written language... actual grammar errors (not just typos) are actually very rare and hard to achieve! wacky punctuation is a tool for deeper grammatical structures than typically used in written language... spoken language is king [queen]... email is a revolution in language because it lets the convoluted beauty of real language be concretized... because of this i think we are currently experiencing an historical peak in the aesthetic quality of written language... the average busy internet chat forum is a deeper literary achievement than Shakespeare's entire ouevre IMO... new genres of discourse, new levels of subtlety... it will probably get even better... just some stream-of-consciousness remarks... email is a finely woven net to the fishing spear of ink and paper... Mike SE Pennsylvania Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 >The specific example of lists like this being more important for the >communication than anything else, yes, absolutely, positively I agree. >I mean, where else could you possibly find such a wonderful line as .... > > " If your poop stinks, you need to do this. " priceless...ain't it? <weg> Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 >It does make a difference. no it doesn't actually - it depends on what your parents *value* (and what YOU value) - not the mere fact that they were teachers. IF that were the case, then i'd have the same pet peeves about grammar or spelling that you and mjf do, yet i don't despite the fact that i was also raised by educators (mom is a writer and former english tutor). the point is that not all educators believe that grammar and spelling have the same import as communication itself. having said that, my mom still corrects my grammar to this day, but at the same time, when she was an english tutor at a nearby college for 15 years or so, they focused on content rather than grammar,spelling and other mechanics of language. i enjoy making grammatical errors purposely just to annoy my mom, as a matter of fact. <g> but her experience teaching how to think, synthesize, organize and present an argument in writing in addition to my own experience in ed school and as an educator (plus some of my language background) has convinced me that language mechanics should be kept in perspective. > >Growing up hearing correct grammar and learning to speak it from the >beginning does not denote rigidity. i didn't say it did. i heard and learned " correct " grammar too. my point was that the mechanics of any given language is less important than the content and the ability to communicate - again it's just a matter of keeping the mechanics in perspective - useful tools for economic advancement to be sure - but " correct " - hardly. >I don't remember my parents being " rigid " about language. If my brother I >phrased things incorrectly were told the correct way with several examples. >We were still free to " make merry " with the language when it was obvious >that we knew the correct way. i didn't mean to imply that your parents were being rigid - i don't know anything about them so couldn't possibly make that characterization. i'm sorry if it seemed like i was. >My grades in the English class were much better than had I not been raised >by teaching parents. i would guess the same goes for me, although i don't know for sure since i wasn't raised by non-teaching parents, so have no idea how i would've done in english had that been the case. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2004 Report Share Posted February 1, 2004 Suze- >these things evolve and change over time, making any specific >dialect no greater or worse than any other (ie; there is no " correct " >dialect of german, english, etc.) This sort of cultural relativism can be taken too far, but if you're going to insist on it, what's " correct " is what's used and desired by a given community of like-speakers (or like-typers, or like-whateverers), so since the prevailing preference here is for reasonably " good " usage, I'm afraid you've hoisted yourself by your own petard. ;-) - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 >>these things evolve and change over time, making any specific >>dialect no greater or worse than any other (ie; there is no " correct " >>dialect of german, english, etc.) > >This sort of cultural relativism can be taken too far, in some cases cultural relativism can be taken to far, imo as well, but this is not one of them. if you can define and defend a " correct " dialect of any language, i'm all ears. but if you're going >to insist on it, what's " correct " is what's used and desired by a given >community of like-speakers (or like-typers, or like-whateverers), i don't share that opinion. so since >the prevailing preference here is for reasonably " good " usage, I'm afraid >you've hoisted yourself by your own petard. ;-) what are you defining as " good " usage and how do you know your definition of it is the prevailing preference here? and am i not abiding by it? is it the all lower case that bugs you? Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 Which group of words has the correct spelling? Group 1 Labour, behaviour, colour Or Group 2 Labor, behavior, color My spell checker marks the first group as misspelled. But if you live in the UK or Canada your spell checker will mark the second group as misspelled. ;-) So which group is really correct? In England a car has a bonnet and a boot. In the USA it's a hood and a trunk. (If I'm wrong please correct me.) Which is correct? I take the side that says that whatever is accepted usage by a particular group is correct for that group. Judith Alta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 absolutely Judith, I agree both are correct for the group that uses them... --- In , " Judith Alta " <jaltak@v...> wrote: > Which group of words has the correct spelling? > > Group 1 Labour, behaviour, colour > > Or > > Group 2 Labor, behavior, color > > My spell checker marks the first group as misspelled. But if you live in the > UK or Canada your spell checker will mark the second group as misspelled. > ;-) > > So which group is really correct? > > In England a car has a bonnet and a boot. In the USA it's a hood and a > trunk. (If I'm wrong please correct me.) > > Which is correct? > > I take the side that says that whatever is accepted usage by a particular > group is correct for that group. > > Judith Alta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 At 08:17 AM 2/2/04 -0500, you wrote: is it the > all lower case that bugs you? Well, you could always try all caps and see how that works. *ducks* Just KIDDING, folks, just KIDDING!!!!! MFJ Some days the bear will eat you, some days you'll eat the bear. ~Joan Armatrading Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2004 Report Share Posted February 2, 2004 If this list accepted HTML mail I'd throw a snowball at you for that one! ;-) Enjoy! ;-) Judith Alta -----Original Message----- At 08:17 AM 2/2/04 -0500, you wrote: is it the > all lower case that bugs you? Well, you could always try all caps and see how that works. *ducks* Just KIDDING, folks, just KIDDING!!!!! MFJ Some days the bear will eat you, some days you'll eat the bear. ~Joan Armatrading Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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