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England have won the cup.

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Presentation on theme: "England have won the cup."— Presentation transcript:

1 England have won the cup.
Which is correct? England has won the cup. England have won the cup. ISCRESPO

2 CONTRASTS AND SIMILARITIES
& AMERICAN ENGLISH BRITISH ENGLISH CONTRASTS AND SIMILARITIES BY IRMA SHERYL CRESPO

3 DEFINITIONS GRAMMAR – the study of morphology and syntax
MORPHOLOGY – word formation; deals with morphemes SYNTAX – sentence construction; involves words, phrases, clauses and sentences ISCRESPO

4 -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)

5 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

6 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

7 [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

8 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

9 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

10 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

11 Which is American? Which is British?
England has won the cup. England have won the cup. ISCRESPO

12 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

13 THE END ISCRESPO


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