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Thread: O/T:- Creeping Americanisation of British English usage.

  1. #31
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
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    743
    The increasing use of verbally starting a sentence in replying to a question with the word 'So' is sipping me off at the minute.

  2. #32
    Join Date
    May 2021
    Posts
    2,579
    Yes it seems strange to me how women/girls/ladies/lasses, and any other term used for the female gender, has accepted this without a murmur, to being labelled a guy. If the tw*tty Americans had decided it was ok to call everyone 'gals', I would like to think there would be uproar from us blokes.

  3. #33
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
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    7,546
    Quote Originally Posted by Moreton_Pie View Post
    The increasing use of verbally starting a sentence in replying to a question with the word 'So' is sipping me off at the minute.
    According to the urban dictionary people using 'so' to start a sentence are beginning their response with referring to their 'significant other'!

  4. #34
    Join Date
    Jan 2023
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    1,720
    Quote Originally Posted by Jeekay56 View Post
    Did you have school dinners served by dinner ladies?
    I take a packed lunch for dinner time

  5. #35
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
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    18,918
    Quote Originally Posted by Jeekay56 View Post
    Did you have school dinners served by dinner ladies?
    Blast from the past playground song........

    Dinner, dinner, dinner, dinner
    Dinner, dinner, dinner, dinner
    BATMAN!!!!

  6. #36
    Join Date
    Dec 2021
    Posts
    294
    Quote Originally Posted by sidders View Post
    Because it's called English doesn't mean we English own it. if it wasn't for the Americans speaking English our language wouldn't have the dominant position it does. Everyone in the world wants to speak English in order to enhance their job prospects. But no one nation can lay claim to owning a language anymore than it owns the oxygen in its atmosphere.
    Languages are not static. Why is 'different than' wrong and 'different from' right? Does it matter, as long as it doesn't confuse communication? If languages were static we would have no problem for example understanding the language of Shakespeare's day because it wouldn't have developed. By the same token, how we talk now will need a language expert by the year 2200, never mind 3000.
    For me the one 'Americanism' I rail against is the use of 'you guys' regardless of gender or age. It assumes audiences are made up of one humongous mass with no individual entities. As a teacher, I much preferred 'blokes' or 'chaps' or 'lasses' or 'ladies'.
    Fascinating thread, by the way.
    El Sid
    I think you are missing the point of the thread, the heading is a bit deceptive but is clearly lamenting the Americanisation of British English, our friends across the pond have their own version of it. The English Language has always been a bit of a word thief though, taking words from other languages and adapting them for our use. We need to be more accepting of these things.

    But the next person to tell me it's sKedule not SHedule because they learnt it in school should be exiled.

  7. #37
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Posts
    18,551
    Quote Originally Posted by upthemaggies View Post
    Blast from the past playground song........

    Dinner, dinner, dinner, dinner
    Dinner, dinner, dinner, dinner
    BATMAN!!!!
    Was he combatting Egghead ?
    With a Penguin for afters.
    Last edited by lunaspie; 20-01-2023 at 03:15 PM. Reason: extra pun

  8. #38
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
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    24,769
    Quote Originally Posted by Moreton_Pie View Post
    The increasing use of verbally starting a sentence in replying to a question with the word 'So' is sipping me off at the minute.
    Yes that's been happening more and more of late, so much so that it's become the norm it seems.

  9. #39
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Posts
    24,769
    Quote Originally Posted by MarcusCole View Post
    I think you are missing the point of the thread, the heading is a bit deceptive but is clearly lamenting the Americanisation of British English, our friends across the pond have their own version of it. ....
    You're right, I'll amend the title. Good point. Sorry also to Sid, I should have made it clearer.

  10. #40
    Join Date
    Feb 2019
    Posts
    2,157
    Quote Originally Posted by Glad2BeAPie View Post
    Does anyone say Dinner and not Lunch, that peeves me and won't say it, growing up we had breakfast, dinner, tea, supper. Where did Lunch come from
    Lunch comes between breakfast and dinner and another one between dinner and tea.

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