Flivver
Practically Family
- Messages
- 821
- Location
- New England
Here in Massachusetts, it was always a bag. But my mid-western cousins called it a sack...as in "Put those groceries in a paper sack".
Midnight Palace said:I always thought "theatre" referred to the stage, while "theater" referred to a room showing a film. I could be waaaayyy off though.
The Dame said:As for American English vs. British English, whenever I taught English abroad, I enjoyed telling my students (who had predominantly learned BE) that they needed to be careful when asking an American if they could borrow a rubber. A rubber in Britain is an eraser in the States.
Fletch said:What are some Briticisms not used anymore? Does anyone still say bally this and bally that? Or tiggerty-boo? Did they ever?
dhermann1 said:I'm waiting for an invasion of "brilliant". The word has been really done to death in the UK (with the letter R evolving into "bwilliant" a lot, it seems). On the other hand, I'll be very bummed out if I started hearing a lot of Brits saying "awesome" all the time.
Lancealot said:"Brilliant" in a British accent always reminds me of the Guinness commercials.
zaika said:i read somewhere (might have been here for all i remember) that here in the US there used to be a stigma attached to the term "flat." it was reserved and used to describe poor and cramped living spaces in urban areas? and an apartment was more cushy and like a home. so, it's amusing to me that the term "flat" is becoming fashionable. lol
jamespowers said:lol lol lol That's what I thought when I first saw it mentioned. lol