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Any English Scholars?
| Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Kay???? | Report | 19 Mar 2007 08:06 |
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Hi, Bringing back memories from school days,,,,a reading test at aged of about 10,,,,,,,,,,,,,all was fine till I got to=========Picturesque,,,,,,,,say what you see...............Picture--SQUE,,,,,,,,,,!!! where did the ESK go,???suffice to say one word I never forgot to spell,,,,,,,,,))) |
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♫ Penny € | Report | 19 Mar 2007 07:34 |
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Len , you spell just like my son :-) |
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Len of the Chilterns | Report | 18 Mar 2007 23:13 |
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My car's antique The gaskets lique And since last wique The bearings sqique. But even though The oil don't flough T'will be a blough To let it gough. len |
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Jacqueline | Report | 18 Mar 2007 22:36 |
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the letters 'ou' have a lot of different ways of being pronounced. McLoughlan (sounds like 'loch') through, (to) trough, (off) thorough, (but) ought, (caught) enough (cuff) though (woe) plough (wow) scour, (rhymes with bower to some) hiccough ('hiccup') Why is the American pronunciation for the word 'herb' like the French, 'erb? |
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maggiewinchester | Report | 18 Mar 2007 22:27 |
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Thanks OC - it is a lovely language isn't it :o) How do other's pronounce 'detritis'. I know how I was told to pronounce it, but heard it pronounced another way on Radio 4 last week - it took me a few minutes before I realised what word they were using!!! maggie |
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Researching: |
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An Olde Crone | Report | 18 Mar 2007 22:17 |
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Maggie Again it is the difference in the origin of the words... Dive - is an old English word. Dived or dove, is equally correct. English people tend to use the word 'dived' as 'dove' sounds slightly clumsy, and we like to indicate the past tense by adding -ed. Driver is a french word, and the past tense is therefore drove. OC |
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maggiewinchester | Report | 18 Mar 2007 22:05 |
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Ann, how right you are about Americanisms. We say he dived into the water, Americans say he dove, which what we used to say and is the more logical. You drive your car and you drove it yesterday, therefore, logically, You dive into the water and you dove in yesterday. maggie |
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Researching: |
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Sally Moonchild | Report | 18 Mar 2007 20:32 |
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Thanks Ails......seems easy when you think about it... |
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♫ Penny € | Report | 18 Mar 2007 20:29 |
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Did you get any flours today Ann? Who scent them two ewe? Who was the won? Hope it didn't brake the bank! You never no they might come in pears! |
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Ails from NI | Report | 18 Mar 2007 20:21 |
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Why not say - I sent you a text yesterday - that way you avoid the making a mistake!! Ails x |
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Sally Moonchild | Report | 18 Mar 2007 20:17 |
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Texted is the normal one in use, but I use text instead, I find it easier, although perhaps wrong.... |
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♫ Penny € | Report | 18 Mar 2007 20:12 |
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In answer to your other question Ann Even though the word census is of Latin origin, and in ancient times the plural would probably have been censi, in common usage today the plural is censuses. |
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♫ Penny € | Report | 18 Mar 2007 20:10 |
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texted - passed/past tense !! |
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♫ Penny € | Report | 18 Mar 2007 20:01 |
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Sow eye will look on another sight two sea what else eye can put in my draught letter too the teacher :-) |
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An Olde Crone | Report | 18 Mar 2007 19:31 |
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'Buy' is from an old Norse word, 'bogjan' 'Catch' is from a French word. As the two words would have been used by different sections of the community, they would have been pronounced in the old ways and different rules of grammar used for the past tenses. Here in Cornwall, the local dialect for 'bought' is 'boughten', e.g. 'Did you make this cake yourself? No, its a boughten one' They also say 'I catched a cold' rather than 'I caught a cold'. Spelling and grammar werent formalised in this country until the 1870 Education Act and people just used whatever words and grammar came naturally. What a minefield! OC |
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Janet in Yorkshire | Report | 18 Mar 2007 19:17 |
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What about weather, whether and wether? Jay |
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maggiewinchester | Report | 18 Mar 2007 19:00 |
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French - Poisson - fish Poison - poison |
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Researching: |
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Sally Moonchild | Report | 18 Mar 2007 18:59 |
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Ach.....I know exactly.....schiessen and scheissen......to shoot at a goal.....and if you did the other one, you would be in real trouble.... |
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Sally Moonchild | Report | 18 Mar 2007 18:56 |
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That was a good reverse psychological ploy there Ann ...the sort you see with game show hosts......they may know tiddly-squat about the subject, but they give the answer as though they knew it themselves all along...... |
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}((((*> Jeanette The Haddock <*)))){ | Report | 18 Mar 2007 18:52 |
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LOL Ann! There's one in Spanish like that. One means a drinking straw, the other is something you wouldn't say in polite company! LOL |
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