Okay, the U is like Canada itself. Not really necessary, but every once in awhile you notice it and think, "Hey, wait, is that supposed to be there? Kinda pretty, kinda neat, kinda different, but... what's the point?" and then you shrug and forget about it again.
BUT I will say that "flavour" is much sexier than "flavor".
Oh, and once my sister's fiance spent hours messing with the BNL song "Grade 9" and finally got it so they said "Ninth Grade". In defense of his this pathetic waste of time, he said, "But their way was wrong!"
after the revolutionary war, america wanted to seperate themselves from britain. Webster, of webster's dictionary, dropped silent letters and u's from words that he felt didnt need them. To make a long story short, useage dictates correctness.....if enough people do it the wrong way, in grammar, it is eventually correct.
Lynnever wrote:Actually, the U does have a purpose. It's supposed to lengthen the vowel . . . . I think.
Yeah. You don't say the end of "colour" like you say the word "or".
picturize the nights and days you close the book and float away and somehow in between you gotta master lying to yourself you max your cards get out of school you get a job your job gets you and somehow every day you end up serving somebody else
gravity wrote:after the revolutionary war, america wanted to seperate themselves from britain. Webster, of webster's dictionary, dropped silent letters and u's from words that he felt didnt need them. To make a long story short, useage dictates correctness.....if enough people do it the wrong way, in grammar, it is eventually correct.
Aerindipity wrote:Okay, the U is like Canada itself. Not really necessary, but every once in awhile you notice it and think, "Hey, wait, is that supposed to be there? Kinda pretty, kinda neat, kinda different, but... what's the point?" and then you shrug and forget about it again.
Just because I am sexy, naked, a bassist, and sporting a top hat doesn't make me Duncan Coutts!
aww, come on guys, you have to admit...it's funny.
I saw a documentary on PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) and Vietnam War vets, and decided that I'm pretty sure that I want to live in Canada, once I finish my schooling. That kinda was "the straw that broke the camel's back" (yeah, I know, corny idiom) The stuff that they made these soldiers do, I don't even want to talk about it. Disturbing, to say the least.
HARDCORE!!!
OMG. I can't believe I din't think fo you
until now because when I think on
a scale of one to ten you're like YWELVE.
No, seriously?
we learned about the canadian government today...i kinda like...i want to move to canada cause it's impossible to seriously hate canada..unless you're a moron who doesn't matter. i love canada..they have so much to offer and don't get enough credit.
I've gotten in heated discussions about the American English language with one of my friends. I think that people should speak proper english and be gramatically correct, and he thinks that language has evolved and it's perfectly ok to say things like, "he don't know nothing," "I did that good" "What are them things," etc.
His main argument: if everybody still spoke "proper English," we'd be saying things like "thee, thou, hither, etc"
Does anybody have any thoughts on this? You'll never change my mind, but I like to know what the young people of this generation think about this issue.
HARDCORE!!!
OMG. I can't believe I din't think fo you
until now because when I think on
a scale of one to ten you're like YWELVE.
No, seriously?
Aerindipity wrote:Okay, the U is like Canada itself. Not really necessary, but every once in awhile you notice it and think, "Hey, wait, is that supposed to be there? Kinda pretty, kinda neat, kinda different, but... what's the point?" and then you shrug and forget about it again.
Calm down... Canada's great; I'd live there if I could.
luckyJQ9 wrote:we learned about the canadian government today...i kinda like...i want to move to canada cause it's impossible to seriously hate canada..unless you're a moron who doesn't matter. i love canada..they have so much to offer and don't get enough credit.
*clumsyrific* wrote:His main argument: if everybody still spoke "proper English," we'd be saying things like "thee, thou, hither, etc"
Does anybody have any thoughts on this? You'll never change my mind, but I like to know what the young people of this generation think about this issue.
That's not "proper english". That's Old English.
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