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US vs. UK English
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hm
no ass in the UK? I think some here would differ. |
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I had a British computer science professor who used a US-UK dictionary as an example program. His example sentence was:
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The couple I checked seemed good, they did biscuit/cookie quite well, a biscuit and are cookie are different things, not different names for the same thing.
Interestingly they didn't have beer, the drink commonly decribed as beer in the US is called lager in the UK. Common beer in the UK is bitter. Quote:
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I loved old Who. I still do. I love all of them, and listen to the audio plays too.
But I also love nu-Who. Tennant was a brilliant Doctor. Didn't always agree with the direction RTD took the stories, but Tennant's portrayal of the Doctor was excellent. And the current run with Matt Smith has been awesome. Excellent storytelling from Moffatt and a Doctor who sits very comfortably in my mind alongside the best of the Classic series. |
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Bloody hell, fuck a duck, the cat's cactus. |
Speaking of classic Who...
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Always through Romana I was a bit of a pratt. Liked Romana II, though.
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Mary Tamm died last Thursday.
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She died after losing an 18-month battle with cancer. She was a great lady and she will be missed. She was "the noblest Romana of them all." |
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Funnily enough, in conversation beer is now generally assumed to be lager - bitter needs to be specified.
"Coming for a few beers after work?" "I'm just going to sit in the back garden and have a few cold beers." But it's still true that if you go into a pub and ask for a pint of beer you will either have it queried (by a good barmaid) or get a pint of bitter. In fact any decent pub should query it as they will have more than one type of bitter anyway. I noticed something similar in Leicester. The local use of cob meant a white crusty bread roll. But in general terms a cob was any bread roll. When I worked in the bakery I always checked whether someone asking for a bacon cob really wanted a bacon bap (soft bread roll). Not being pedantic - I learned in my first week that people got quite cross if you got it "wrong". Oh, ditto rum. Rum & Coke could mean Bacardi or Captain Morgan, but you were always in the wrong if you didn't pour what the customer expected! What an imprecise language British English is... |
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