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England have won the cup.
Which is correct? England has won the cup. England have won the cup. ISCRESPO
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CONTRASTS AND SIMILARITIES
& AMERICAN ENGLISH BRITISH ENGLISH CONTRASTS AND SIMILARITIES BY IRMA SHERYL CRESPO
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DEFINITIONS GRAMMAR – the study of morphology and syntax
MORPHOLOGY – word formation; deals with morphemes SYNTAX – sentence construction; involves words, phrases, clauses and sentences ISCRESPO
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-ize/-ise: organize (AmE) / organise (BrE)
ISCRESPO SPELLING -or/-our: honor (AmE) / honour (BrE) -er/-re: center (AmE) / centre (BrE) -log/-logue: dialog (AmE) / dialogue (BrE) z -ense/-ence: license (AmE) / licence (BrE) -ize/-ise: organize (AmE) / organise (BrE) -tion/-xion: inflection (AmE) / inflexion (BrE) e/oe & ae: fetus (AmE) / foetus (BrE) gynecology (AmE) / gynaecology (BrE)
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For verbs ending in –ed and –ing :
SPELLING For verbs ending in –ed and –ing : l/ll: traveled, traveling (AmE) travelled, travelling (BrE) Long words shortened: fulfill (AmE) , fulfil (BrE) skillful (AmE) , skilful (BrE) willful (AmE) , wilful (BrE) Both AmE and BrE spell complexion with –xion . ISCRESPO
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SEMANTICS mail/post valve/tube
vacation/holiday AmE: “go on vacation”, Happy Holidays, Holiday Season BrE: “go on holiday”, holiday cottages mail/post AmE: The letters would be in the mail this evening. BrE: The letters would be in the post this evening. AmE and BrE: the same meaning for valve/tube AmE: radio sets have tubes BrE: radio sets have valves AmE and BrE: television sets have tubes ISCRESPO
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[d] or [t] after voiced consonants [i] and [d] or [e] and [t]
STRUCTURE Verb Forms Past Tense and Participles [d] or [t] after voiced consonants AmE: learned, learned; smelled, smelled; spelled, spelled BrE: learnt, learnt; smelt, smelt; spelt, spelt [i] and [d] or [e] and [t] AmE: dreamed, dreamed; kneeled, kneeled BrE: dreamt, dreamt; knelt, knelt Other forms AmE: dove, dived; proved, proven; got, got/gotten BrE: dived, dived; proved, proved/proven; got, got ISCRESPO
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Subject/Verb Agreement
Collective Nouns AmE: The government has decided. BrE: The government have decided. AmE and BrE: staff and police take plural agreement Pronouns pertaining to collective nouns AmE: The team has a lot of confidence in their players. BrE: The team have a lot of confidence in their players. The generic pronoun, one AmE: One must be careful about his investments. BrE: One must be careful about one’s investments. (AmE is moving towards the BrE form for political correctness.) ISCRESPO
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Determiners The Modal Shall Not
a and an AmE and BrE: The a is used before a consonant. The an is used before a vowel. a bottle , an apple the AmE: My son is at the university. / Das is in the hospital. BrE: My son is at university. / Das is in hospital AmE: in the fall BrE: in (the) autumn The Modal Shall Not AmE: shall not (formal) BrE: shan’t ISCRESPO
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CONCLUSION The features presented are just a few of the predictable comparisons of American English and British English. American English may find its roots in British English but when Americans acquired independence, history bestowed a place of its own. John Witherspoon, a Scottish - born American statesman, confirms this autonomy in 1781, “ Americanisms…different from the use of the same terms or phrases, or the construction of similar sentences, in Great Britain.” ISCRESPO
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Which is American? Which is British?
England has won the cup. England have won the cup. ISCRESPO
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References Biber, Douglas; Conrad, Susan; Leech, Geoffrey Longman Student Grammar of Spoken and Written English, Harlow: Pearson Education Limited. Biber, Douglas; Conrad, Susan; Finegan, Edward; Johansson, Stig; Leech, Geoffrey Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English, Harlow: Pearson Education Limited. Hundt, Marianne New Zealand English Grammar:Fact or Fiction, Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company. Quirk, Randolph; Greenbaum, Sidney; Leech, Geoffrey; Svartvik A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language , London/New York: Longman Group Limited. Tottie, Gunnel An Introduction to American English,Malden/Oxford: Blackwell Publishers Inc. Tsardanelis, Georgios; Wong, Wai Yi Peggy 2001.Language Files, Ohio: The Ohio State University. ISCRESPO
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THE END ISCRESPO
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