So, I have had several people ask me about my spelling. My favorite time has been when I had a person come up to me at college and tell me that I was spelling things wrong or that I was calling things by the wrong name. All I have to say is, oh silly American English. So, today I am taking a break from my usual posting to clear up some terms and spellings that people keep telling me are incorrect.
First
things first. Where was I born? Not in the Commonwealth! Amazingly I was born
in the middle of the United States to my wonderful Mother and Father that are
of
Oto-Missouria/Dutch/Prussian/Scottish/English decent. So, how do I end up
sounding like I’m British rather than American? Well, it comes from learning my
English from people that use Oxford English. *sigh* For the longest time my
teaches and professors thought I grew up overseas. Oh well. That’s life.
Next:
the questions that I get the most. “What is up with you adding a u to various
words?” and “why do you keep spelling the word color wrong?” I am not spelling colour
wrong. To me you all are spelling colour wrong. I spell it the same way that I
have always spelled it. The same thing goes with flavor, labour, honour, and
neighbour. Also, I sometimes people think that I spell words like centre,
litre, and theatre wrong. No, that’s how the English spell the words center,
liter, and theater. Sometimes I spell things like practise instead of practice
or connnexion rather than connection. Most of the time I spell things like
catalog this way: catalogue. That’s just one of my quirks. I’m not spelling it
wrong. I’m spelling it right…in the Commonwealth.
Also,
some of the phrases that I use in my everyday life are more British than they
are American. For example, I often ask people if they would fancy a cuppa. Most
of the time I end up with people looking at me strangely. Of course growing up
in Oklahoma asking someone if they want a cupppa tea isn’t that far of a
stretch and people there just look at me like I’m abbreviating the sentence and
then finish it with what they want. When being asked if you fancy a cuppa, what
a person is asking is if you want a cup of hot tea. Speaking of tea, when being
asked how one takes their tea or coffee what you are being asked is do you want
cream, milk, sugar, or nothing in it and not what kind of cup you want it in.
In a lot of places outside of the States it isn’t uncommon for people to put
milk or cream in their tea. I do this all the time. For a long time my
boyfriend thought I was drinking coffee until he notice the tea bag in my empty
cup. For those who would like a new type of tea to try I would recommend PG
Tips. It’s delicious. I enjoy it quite a bit. I always have a box at work and
at home so that when I feel the need for a cuppa I have it available. I also
use my mobile not my cell phone. For the ladies, and this relates back to one
of my previous fashion posts, I wear tights regardless of if they are called
pantyhose. It weirded my boyfriend out when I started talking about ice
lollies. Those are popsicles for those who don’t know.
I
could go on and on, but alas, I have so many things to get done today that I
must cut my post shorter than what I would like. I will try to start posting
little random tidbits at the end of my post though or explain things that may
be unfamiliar to those who were not raised by Europeans.
Until
the next time!
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