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I mean pronounciation differences during speaking.

2007-11-06 06:07:35 · 7 answers · asked by summer-night-dream 4 in Society & Culture Languages

7 answers

The most obvious differences are in the pronunciation of the vowels. Actually, there are many dialects of English spoken in America and many spoken in the UK, so to get more specific you would have to narrow it down to specific dialects. But if you are interested in how certain dialects pronounce certain words, look for a linguistic atlas of the part of the world you are interested in. Here's a link to one for the USA:
http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/home.html

2007-11-06 19:17:15 · answer #1 · answered by drshorty 7 · 1 1

interior the context you're speaking approximately its approximately spelling. examples: shade vs coloration Privatised vs Privatized there are various different transformations to boot in vernacular. television tube= television (inspite of the certainty that the two are utilized in uk) Chips = french fries Crisps = potato chips(US) Boot= the trunk of a vehicle Bonnet=Hood of a vehicle carry=Elevator highway= highway Pavement= Sidewalk Fanny= shall we basically say it potential an fullyyt diverse area of the female anatomy than the individuals use the word for :D those are a small determination of examples. you apart from mght have transformations interior of 'British' english. as an occasion Scots(not speaking approximately Gaelic here), is bordering on a separate language greater so than a dialect of English at situations. And collectively as lots of the rustic isn't area of england, basically elect to remark that the english in eire, has many diffused transformations to boot Hiberno-english. that show up themselves in diverse sentence structures at situations, to boot as words like usen't which at the instant are not any long area of British english.

2016-09-28 11:20:15 · answer #2 · answered by enns 4 · 0 0

Whoa theres LOADS heres a couple
American - Brtish
sidewalk - pavement
erasor - rubber
math - maths

umm I can't think. Oh yeah *** means Cigarette in Britain but in America its a derogetary (sp?) term for a gay person.

2007-11-06 06:22:09 · answer #3 · answered by Hannah 2 · 1 0

Two countries separated by a common language

2007-11-06 06:10:01 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Well, if you like to put fags in your mouth, that means a totally different thing in the US.

2007-11-06 06:15:11 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Americans speak really cool and British dont.

2007-11-06 06:10:19 · answer #6 · answered by Teenage Drama Queen 3 · 1 2

can't really describe it by typing...
one funny difference is in the uk a rubber is something you use to rub out pencil...I've heard it means something else in america, hehehe :D

2007-11-06 06:10:59 · answer #7 · answered by 地獄 6 · 0 0

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