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English3
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 4:01 pm
Autumn=fall
Some examples given aren't used by the Jews were more upper class than that.
We also use some American words as Jewish literature is only in the American version.
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amother
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 4:02 pm
amother DarkOrange wrote: | Lol in what way did you change?
Did you find it hard
Op
Post is Mail
Bin is garbage
Garden is yard
Pinafore jumper sweter
But the words are the least of the acclimating I had |
They say I now sing my questions instead of asking them 🤷♀️
Do you want to the (here you raise your volume and stretch out the last word) p-a-a-r-k 🎵?
Of course! The English are another breed. lol.
How long are you there?
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amother
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 5:08 pm
amother Jean wrote: | They say I now sing my questions instead of asking them 🤷♀️
Do you want to the (here you raise your volume and stretch out the last word) p-a-a-r-k 🎵?
Of course! The English are another breed. lol.
How long are you there? |
coming up to 15 years,
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Busybee5
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 5:17 pm
amother Jean wrote: | The first time I went to primark (this was before it opened in the US) I went on my first visit to the uk as a newlywed. I was so excited that I found pants for only £10 that I gushed about it to my brand new father in law who couldn’t understand why it was such a good deal! |
😂
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amother
Sapphire
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 5:20 pm
How about invigilate= proctor 😂😂
No word I'm american English for what the English use smart. Fancy just doesn't do it.
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amother
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 5:45 pm
amother Sapphire wrote: | How about invigilate= proctor 😂😂
No word I'm american English for what the English use smart. Fancy just doesn't do it. |
It's used in different ways in America and England. Smart to Americans means clever, in England it means fancy.
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amother
Eggplant
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 7:07 pm
I once was eating at a table with some brits and I asked someone to pass the napkins and the girl I was sitting next to discretely handed me a pad.
I did learn awhile back that in British, you would say you "fell pregnant" and Americans reading that get so offended, like you're acting like it just happened out of nowhere or something when really that's just the standard terminology in the UK.
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nicole81
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Wed, Aug 28 2024, 8:05 pm
amother OP wrote: | I'm a Brit living in NY. My American friends tell me I'm so 'British', but just been to the UK for a Simcha, and my family there say I'm so 'American'!
They're both a bit right and a bit wrong, I'm probably somewhere in the middle!
Looking for some fun, let's make a list of British English versus American English..
Vacation-holiday
Highway-motorway
Trunk-(car) boot
Sidewalk-pavement
Cookie-biscuit
Mall-shopping centre
Parking lot-car park
Tuition-fees
Faucet-tap
Garbage-rubbish
Truck-lorry |
I'm married to Brit who's been in America for 24 years. He has the same situation where Americans think he's so British and in England people think he sounds American.
What's funny is that I happen to have been reading exclusively UK literature for the past 2 years, a book about every 2 weeks so when we visit English family, I naturally use the British version of words where my husband uses american ones. I guess code switching isn't his thing lol.
We're in England now and just today, I said
- "that's quite the queue" and my husband responded 'yeah I'm not waiting on that line'
- " does our rental car have a boot?" to which he responded 'omg I had to think about what you were asking'
- "she's completely bollocks' him; what did you say? "Nevermind. She's full of BS."
Also a lot of the general phraseology differs. We sound so odd together, me with the American accent speaking Brits English and him with the English accent speaking like a born and bred American. People have asked me where I'm from, saying they can't place my accent but I think maybe I'm just confusing them lol.
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amother
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Thu, Aug 29 2024, 2:07 am
amother Eggplant wrote: | I once was eating at a table with some brits and I asked someone to pass the napkins and the girl I was sitting next to discretely handed me a pad.
I did learn awhile back that in British, you would say you "fell pregnant" and Americans reading that get so offended, like you're acting like it just happened out of nowhere or something when really that's just the standard terminology in the UK. |
Your amother color lol! Is it aubergine or eggplant?? English or American??
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amother
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Thu, Aug 29 2024, 6:39 am
amother OP wrote: | Your amother color lol! Is it aubergine or eggplant?? English or American?? |
🤣
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