• @[email protected]
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    261 year ago

    I always want to pronounce the American versions of these words phonetically when I see them.

    And what the heck is going on with the US pronunciation of “buoy”? None of those syllables are in that word.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Buo-y

      Apparently we have the Dutch to blame for that one, as the verb form is apparently descended from Spanish.

      • @Ottomateeverything
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        81 year ago

        I still don’t understand the English insistence on borrowing words from other languages, yet refusal to standardize spelling into ways that actually make sense within the language.

        So I still blame English for being silly with their transliteration.

        • @[email protected]
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          101 year ago

          Blame the great vowel shift.

          But also, English spelling can’t standardize because English pronunciation isn’t standard. West Coast vs Midwest vs South vs East Coast have vastly different accents. Any spelling reform that makes English phonetic for one would be wrong for the others.

          And it keeps changing! People keep moving and interacting with other languages, adding and dropping words and accents over time.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Funny thing about those “French” people.

            William the Bastard of Normandy was the grandson of a fellow named Rollo the Viking.

            Rollo had conquered the French northern coast and wrecked so much shit the French king just offered to make him a vassal, and give him more land in the process, if he protected the land he’d taken from other Viking raiders. This area would develop a hybrid culture from the mixing of the Germanic invaders and French population.

            English, already a bastardized Germanic language, combined from the spoken languages of Germanic invaders who would come to be known as Anglo-Saxons and the native population, got further hybridized by a French Viking who actually spoke a French-Germanic dialect known as Norman.

            Tl;Dr

            Sea Germans hate linguistic purity, and English’s problems are all their fault.

  • @Etterra
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    201 year ago

    I mean we already got rid of T.

  • kamen
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    201 year ago

    Simplified English vs Traditional English

    • @[email protected]
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      181 year ago

      It’s not even that. At the time they split, English wasn’t as standardized. You can see it looking back in the Lewis and Clark expedition journals written by Meriwether Lewis. He doesn’t even have consistency in his own writing, and he was no country bumpkin.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      The Declaration was pre standard. It sure was a political decision to land on another standard than the Bri*ish

  • @saltesc
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    -41 year ago

    I don’t get US spelling of “meter” for the metric system they don’t even use. My car dashboard is two meters wide. Speedometer and tachometer. It’s probably about half a metre wide.

    I dunno what a kilometer would be. A device that can measure anything in thousands of something; weight, volume, speed, etc.

    “The scale says you weigh 0.07 metric tonnes.”

    “Oh my god, I’m so fat.”

    “No, that’s only 70kg, it’s this stupid kilometer. Makes everything seem bigger than it is.”

      • @Viking_Hippie
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        111 year ago

        Now that you have it open, could you find a funny compound noun or two? I love those!

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          I’m German, I don’t need a dictionary for that. We make them up on the fly. For example, Autowaschanlagenführer or Türöffnungsmechanismuswartung

          • @Viking_Hippie
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            1 year ago

            I remember a little German from it being mandatory in school here in Denmark where we also like compound nouns so imma give it a shot:

            “Car wash hose boss” and “door opening mechanism maintenance”?

            • @[email protected]
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              61 year ago

              “door opening mechanism maintenance”

              Yes

              “Car wash hose boss”

              Almost. „Car wash operator“ it is.

              • Psaldorn
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                61 year ago

                If I worked in a car wash I would demand to be called a hose boss

          • @Viking_Hippie
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            61 year ago

            I’m guessing that means speed limit? Nice 😂

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              Okay I’m curious. With Danish being a Germanic language, how much are you benefiting from cognates and the like when making your guesses?

              • @Viking_Hippie
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                11 year ago

                Some. Danish isn’t as closely related to German as it is to Norwegian or Swedish, but there are a lot of similarities such as similar words. Danmark is mostly an even weirder than Dutch combination of German and English 😁

    • @Viking_Hippie
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      121 year ago

      I dunno what a kilometer would be. A device that can measure anything in thousands of something; weight, volume, speed, etc

      It’s the opposite. A kilometer is a thousand meters, a kilowatt is a thousand watts and a kilogram is a shitload of cocaine.

    • Nepenthe
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      1 year ago

      Because homonyms are the worst part of any language and Noah Webster agrees with me.

      for the metric system they don’t even use.

      British people will fund pirates to steal our measuring weights, only to convert themselves 200 years later and then act like the US doesn’t have a single STEM field. And then drive by the mile for a pint of milk.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Well you have me- from proto-european which means to measure.

      Then you have metrical (metricus/metrikos from Latin/Greek) that means to measure rhythm in poetry.

      Mētrum/Metron again from Latin/Greek meaning “measure, length, size, limit, proportion”

      Then “metre” which is originally a unit of length. Then you have a “metre stick” which is a stick used to measure a metre. You can blame the French for basically calling it a “measurement stick” but it refers to a very specific measurement.

      Then you have the -or suffix in Latin which means “to have to do with” or “to pertain to”. Then that turns in to -re and -er in Old English.

      And like everything else - Brittan used both for centuries before deciding one was “right” and everyone else is at fault for the other way (just like how “Soccer” is a British term). Famously Shakespeare used both -re and -er.

      Lastly, the US uses the metric system for its professions. It’s layman’s terms that don’t use metric.