50 Americanisms That Brits Apparently Hate

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lowkey_jotunn

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Feb 23, 2011
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strobe said:
lowkey_jotunn said:
Yeah well ... I don't like that they weasel an extra letter into aluminum.
Aluminum isn't a thing, its definitely not a metal that people make foils out of. Hell I'd be happy to spell sulfur incorrectly (that's what is accepted internationally [by the IUPAC]) if the USA would spell aluminium correctly. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium

(I love this spell checking because it agrees with sulphur and aluminium)

Bizarre.... because my spell check has red wavy lines under both of those. However, sulfur and aluminum are red wavy line free!

Apparently, you also spelled IUPAC wrong ;) Or so my spell check says.
 

WrathOfAchilles

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May 20, 2009
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Obviously someone is still irritated that we broke off from their country a few hundred years ago. I'd like to remind everyone that if you look up a list of world languages you'll see British English and U.S. English. As in two DIFFERENT languages. You don't have to talk the way we do, and we don't have to talk the way you do. I'm fluent in Brazilian Portuguese. Do I go to Portugal and except them to talk as I do? Claro que nao. As for the list, morons talk with those phrases. Except for #50, that one can be found anywhere.
 

lowkey_jotunn

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Feb 23, 2011
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Probably been said, but I've just gotta add... as much as I'll give the Brits crap for little language nit-picks like this, there's one thing they did very right.

The whole egg on fried toast thing ... that is freaking delicious.

I personally like to make it right after bacon. Toss a slice of bread in the grease left behind from cooking bacon. Cook that up on both sides, and put an over-easy egg on top. Hell yeah
 

TCPirate

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Dec 1, 2009
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This is pretty funny, to be fair. I'm British and I don't really have a problem with the way Americans speak... there are a couple that bug me, though. "Mom" instead of "Mum". From what I've heard, they pronounce it "Mum" anyway. When an American says "Mom" it doesn't sound like it's spelt. The only other thing is "Pants" instead of Trousers, but that works both ways... we call underwear Pants sometimes.

But let's not forget how the Britishisms are considered annoying in America. We call cigarettes, in england, Fags. which could be seen as slightly offensive in America.

"I'm just popping out for a quick fag."

I do want to say that not all British people are like that.
Most of them just think Americans are fat, ignorant and backwards (especially anyone from the southern states) but then again... that's what most countries sterotype Americans at.
But for some reason, it's really bad in England. I guess it's because we're a stupidly ignorant country ourselves.
 

RamirezDoEverything

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Jan 31, 2010
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46) How the fuck are you supposed to pronounce Z?!

It's "zee"!

I never knew the Brits hated our mannerisms so much, when in all reality, the British actually changed the language more than we did..
 

KapnKerfuffle

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May 17, 2008
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What about "you can't have your cake and eat it too.". It should be "eat your cake and have it too.". Dudley Moore pointed this out in a movie once.
 

CAPTCHA

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SFR said:
Nope, it's zest like... well zest. No long E. Actually, I'm having a hard time thinking of a word where just z-e is pronounced zee other than zebra. Zeppelin is zed, for example. Got any more examples of the zee z-e?
To be honest I'm having a hard time thinking of many more words begining with Ze. Zenith? The English pronunciation uses a Zed. I don't know how American's pronouce it. I don't think Zeppelin counts though since it's a German word for a specific vehicle which we would call a Blimp.

LokiArchetype said:
That's not how it works. Pronunciation is a matter of which syllables receive emphasis, not how one pronounces an individual letter.

"B" is pronounced "Bee", that doesn't mean "Bed" is pronounced like "Bead".
True enough

LokiArchetype said:
We say "zee-bra" because emphasis is on the first syllable.
It's the same with English, only that emphasis results in Zed*-bra (silent d). I guess I'm barking up the wrong tree though. There must be a reason for this though, unless the language is so mongrel that there aren't any consistant rules.
 

Rensenhito

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Jan 28, 2009
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Math / Maths... both are short for mathematics. In other words...
I could care less.
:D

Also, what's the British alternative for "train station?" Because, I mean, a train station is a place where trains remain stationary.

EDIT:
Djinn8 said:
SFR said:
Nope, it's zest like... well zest. No long E. Actually, I'm having a hard time thinking of a word where just z-e is pronounced zee other than zebra. Zeppelin is zed, for example. Got any more examples of the zee z-e?
To be honest I'm having a hard time thinking of many more words begining with Ze. Zenith? The English pronunciation uses a Zed. I don't know how American's pronouce it. I don't think Zeppelin counts though since it's a German word for a specific vehicle which we would call a Blimp.
Zero? Zee-row.
 

prolefeedprocessor

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Jun 5, 2010
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It seemed like only some of these were about the differences between UK and US English. Most of them were about things that neither side considers correct (like 15) or are intentionally improper slang (like 2). Number 19 gets it! :D

36 makes me cringe. I know "maths" is acceptable UK English, but this is one that drives me crazy. Both "math" and "maths" are abbreviations for mathematics, and as abbreviations neither one is more "proper" than the other, but "maths" makes my skin crawl.
 

Griffolion

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Aug 18, 2009
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Is anyone else here british and not giving a damn about any if those? The only one I do care about is not in there and that isn't a peeve of sorts, its just a technicality. Its the whole football/soccer thing which has been gone over already.

But im sensing this thread is a 'we hate america' thread with a new lick of paint. Let's just drop it, they have their own culture and are entitled to their own neologisms and idiom. If we are going to be pedantic, im sure the germans and italians would have a lot to say about the english language, since thats where we derived our language from. Swings and roundabouts in the end.
 

Innegativeion

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Feb 18, 2011
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chris_ninety1 said:
Sorry, I'm going to have to correct you on that. Being that 'mathematics' is always written in the pluralised form, you wouldn't for example write that 'many fairgrounds' could be abbreviated to 'many fair'. Abbreviations don't always have to be a case of removing every single letter after a certain point. It's a bit like the correct abbreviation of 'would not' is 'won't' whereby we're picking letters almost at random out of the middle to remove. I'm not saying America shouldn't use 'math' since as I said before, it's just the way language evolves, but if the Gods of language all got together and decreed that everybody had to use the exact same language depending on what was more gramatically correct, they'd pick 'maths' over 'math'.

Of course, in German it's Mathematik so maybe we should just all go with what they say instead.


Except that fair comes from the word "faire", as in renaissance, as in a gathering of novelties, its not an abbreviation for fairgrounds.

And won't is a contraction, not technically an abbreviation... plus won't is "will not", not "would not" which is wouldn't. So that's an "ill" being replaced with an o for no reason, but English in general is stupid like that.

Actually yeah, now that I think about it, you would say mathematic as an adjective.
Accentually, old bean, it is ALWAYS "maths" or "mathematics" across the pond.
Doesn't change the fact that it makes no sense to me, or any American I'm sure. It's not spelled "math s ematics"
 

Shoggoth2588

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I'm an American and I also hate when people say "could care less" when they mean the opposite. I couldn't care less about Battlefield 3 but I could care less about Skyrim. I could care a LOT less about Skyrim but, I don't.
 

ryanxm

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Jan 19, 2009
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So some of the british dont like how we say some things, Who cares?

Personally i find the way they pronounce tuna to be very irritating.
 

Captain Booyah

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superdelux said:
Dear Brits

Remember World War II.STFU

America
Ugh, grow up. Pulling out an historical event as some kind of trump card, like it's worth a shit anymore in the present, is just the height of both ignorance and stupidity. You weren't even alive during WWII, so stop acting like you were and realise that you can't judge an entire country with an entirely new generation of people for past events. You're the exact kind of person that fuels American stereotypes in the first place! Good Lord.

Actually on TOPIC: I'm English, and wow is that a stupid list. Some of them are justified -- I mean, the "could care less" thing is a real annoyance to a lot of people here on The Escapist -- but 24/7? And what is the alternative for a train station?! So stupid, especially when it makes no difference (e.g. grammatically or definition-wise) what you say, like Sidewalk = Pavement: we all know what we mean when we say either. You'd think the BBC had better things to do.
 

GlockO'Clock

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Nov 18, 2009
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You're all missing the point entirely. The people in this list don't care how you Americans talk, they're annoyed at British people using Americanisms over here, confusing other British people.
 

Marik2

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Nov 10, 2009
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3AM said:
I wonder if anyone else has mentioned this fact (22 pages is too much for even me to read) - language is a living thing. It moves, mutates, evolves, devolves, is added to and subtracted from. Language belongs to everyone who speaks it, no matter how they speak it. You are aware that the OED adds new words to their dictionary annually, aren't you?

And to the next person that wishes me a happy berfday instead of birthday, you just shut your mouth!
Oh its has been pointed out but people dont care :p
 

CrematedCube

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Nov 22, 2010
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In my opinion, the word "math" versus "maths" implies different properties.
"Maths" implies a collection of separate fields or techniques.
"Math" implies a substance with no well-defined features.
I personally am more comfortable with "math" but can imagine using "maths" to specify variety or specialty.
 

mirror's edgy

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Sep 30, 2010
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3AM said:
I wonder if anyone else has mentioned this fact (22 pages is too much for even me to read) - language is a living thing. It moves, mutates, evolves, devolves, is added to and subtracted from. Language belongs to everyone who speaks it, no matter how they speak it. You are aware that the OED adds new words to their dictionary annually, aren't you?

And to the next person that wishes me a happy berfday instead of birthday, you just shut your mouth!
Shut your MOUF, sir. Yes, Americans find that mispronunciation annoying as well.

I would say the list is 50 percent overreacting to real grammatical errors, 50 percent taking issue with valid uses of words and phrases that happened to start in other regions.

FYI: Gas is an abbreviation of gasoline. Gasoline is a derivative of naturally occurring crude oil, AKA petroleum. Gasoline is the liquid car fuel, meaning that the two are in fact, different. Sorry if that sounded aggressive, but America seems to be in the right this time and some Brits should not be correcting them.