- Portals
- The Current Year
- ED in the News
- Admins
- Help ED Rebuild
- Archive
- ED Bookmarklet
- Donate Bitcoin
Contact an admin on Discord or EDF if you want an account. Also fuck bots.
American English: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>WheatThins No edit summary |
imported>AlGore |
||
| (11 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<div align="center"><youtube>YAWg6PeAabs</youtube><br>'''[[You]]''' - speaking English</div> | |||
{{quote|An atlantic crossing is long, to pass the time my family decided to ruin the english language on the mayflower.| | {{quote|An atlantic crossing is long, to pass the time my family decided to ruin the english language on the mayflower.|Ouchies|on being an [[American]].}} | ||
A language invented purely by accident during [[World War II]] when a shipment of the letter "u"'s from Britain to America was bombarded by Nazi missiles, hence the lack of the letter "u" in American words, such as: color. Because of the event, many Americans were enlightened so they started replacing "s"s with "z"s ("customise" -> customize). The change to "z" actually makes sense, though, since "s" and "z" are different sounds. The language is now for the most part replaced by [[shit nobody cares about|Esperanto]]. | |||
<center> | |||
[[Image:Comic2-490.png||Description]] | [[Image:Comic2-490.png||Description]] | ||
{{Language}} | {{Language}} | ||
</center> | |||
Latest revision as of 13:18, 13 December 2016
You - speaking English
—Ouchies, on being an American. | ||
A language invented purely by accident during World War II when a shipment of the letter "u"'s from Britain to America was bombarded by Nazi missiles, hence the lack of the letter "u" in American words, such as: color. Because of the event, many Americans were enlightened so they started replacing "s"s with "z"s ("customise" -> customize). The change to "z" actually makes sense, though, since "s" and "z" are different sounds. The language is now for the most part replaced by Esperanto.
| American English is part of a series on Language & Communication | |
|---|---|
Languages and Dialects • Grammar, Punctuation, Spelling, Style, and Usage • Rhetorical Strategies • Poetry •
The Politics of Language and Communication • Media • Visual Rhetoric
Click topics to expand |
|
