TuckandStuiesMom
<font color=darkorchid>Age. Fac ut gaudeam<br><fon
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2005
- Messages
- 2,579
I recently read a post from a person who's relative had been diagnosed with "altimers."![]()
My gramma used to call it oldtimers...
I recently read a post from a person who's relative had been diagnosed with "altimers."![]()
Hey! I think he sounds pretty darned intelligent!Good God in Heaven. My boyfriend sounds like a fancy pants.
My gramma used to call it oldtimers...
It's more of a colloquial or phonetic-ish (yes, I know that's not a word!) issue than a UK/US thing. Most people just spell it the way they use it, wrong though it may be![]()
Ah, the dreaded "Gotten". ...
Gotten is the past tense of GET. However, it came over to the Americas with the British, but over time, it seemed to drop out of all UK vernacular, and only American's have held onto the word. We use it in a way that no other English speaking country does. It is reported that the UK only use it in the way that you described "ill-gotten means" or the like. We use it as "I would have gotten the bread yesterday if you told me we were out of bread." Or, "She had gotten the infection from bad seafood."
Good God in Heaven. My boyfriend sounds like a fancy pants.
AND...because i haven't complained enough, lol...I CAN'T STAND IT when people say "probly" or "libary." HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Why do so many people think the plural of bus is busses? Isn't it buses?![]()
Why do so many people think the plural of bus is busses? Isn't it buses?![]()
Actually, "buses" or "busses" is acceptable.