What is the language "British"?

Michael P. Brininstool mikepb at hoplite.org
Tue Aug 29 15:27:52 UTC 2006


How much of the difference is that there were few, if any, standard
spellings until after Australia and America had been colonized?

-----Original Message-----
From: fedora-list-bounces at redhat.com [mailto:fedora-list-bounces at redhat.com]
On Behalf Of Tim
Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2006 9:08 AM
To: For users of Fedora Core releases
Subject: Re: What is the language "British"?

Tim:
> > Some time ago our newspapers started using American spelling, which 
> > *is* "incorrect" to do in Australia.  One reason given was that it 
> > was a complete pain trying to work around the American spell checker.
> 
Gene Heskett:
> Humm, if it results in less miss-understandings between the peoples by 
> pushing the people toward a common ground for language usage, I can't 
> see as its an undesirable effect.

Okay, let's see the yanks fall in line with origins of their language,
rather than subverting someone else's...  ;-)

> In the above case, I believe there are English(GB) versions of the 
> spell checkers available, so why don't they use them?

My guess would be along the lines that a dedicated news paper's printing
system was a bit more limited in software choices than the average desk top
computer word processor.  I did say "some time ago", I've no idea what their
current excuse is.

For what it's worth, Australian English is distinctly different than other
countries.  You do need to regionalise such things.  Trying to tell another
country to spell things in a foreign way is insulting.
We'll inventitate our own languages, thank you very much...

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