The only time I have ever said Aboot is when I'm joking around about it :dunno: and I don't think I've ever heard someone actually say it well not joking.
Troyota said:ok...you guys are the experts. I'll take your word for it. But, next time I hear somebody say it, I'll be sure to find out where they are from. That way you guys can go to thier town and kick some ass for fueling the stereotype.
I love you guys...if it wasn't so damn cold. I wouldn't mind moving to Canada some times. But I'd still say "Zee"
Troyota said:Well, the average temp here has been in the 90's to 100's every day...today it was 95* w/ 30% humidity...that sucked. I hate humidity!!! The winters rarely get below 40's or 50's (in farenheit). I like the warm climate of the American SouthWest. And the atmosphere and attitude of the people is generally only second to the friendly Canadians.
Troyota said:I say "Aloooo-Minum" it's said the way it's spelled...it's not spelled Aluminium!
The spelling in –um continued in occasional use in Britain for a while, though that in –ium soon predominated. In the USA, the position was more complicated. Noah Webster’s Dictionary of 1828 has only aluminum, though the standard spelling among US chemists throughout most of the nineteenth century was aluminium; it was the preferred version in The Century Dictionary of 1889 and is the only spelling given in the Webster Unabridged Dictionary of 1913. Searches in an archive of American newspapers show a most interesting shift. Up to the 1890s, both spellings appear in rough parity, though with the –ium version slightly the more common, but after about 1895 that reverses quite substantially, with the decade starting in 1900 having the –um spelling about twice as common as the alternative; in the following decade the –ium spelling crashes to a few hundred compared to half a million examples of –um.
[...]
It’s clear that the shift in the USA from –ium to –um took place progressively over a period starting in about 1895, when the metal began to be widely available and the word started to be needed in popular writing. It is easy to imagine journalists turning for confirmation to Webster’s Dictionary, still the most influential work at that time, and adopting its spelling. The official change in the US to the –um spelling happened quite late: the American Chemical Society only adopted it in 1925, though this was clearly in response to the popular shift that had already taken place. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) officially standardised on aluminium in 1990, though this has done nothing, of course, to change the way people in the US spell it for day to day purposes.
supra90turbo said:oh you're a yank, alright
tte said:Now the word "Garage"
Is it Gar raj like "Ga" Garfield the Cat and long streched "raj"
Or
"Ga" rage Like "Ga in Garett Turbo and "rudge" in Grduge.
I guess here in USA they say Gar Raj. In other parts of the world esp those countries following the english from England they say "Ga rudge"
Cheers,
Roy
:biglaugh:britannica.com said:Yankee: a native or citizen of the United States or, more narrowly, of the New England states of the United States (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut). The term Yankee is often associated with such characteristics as shrewdness, thrift, ingenuity, and conservatism.