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karl
December 14th, 2012, 05:13 AM
Online, English has become a common language for users from around the world. In the process, the language itself is changing.

When America emerged from the ashes of a bruising war with Britain in 1814, the nation was far from united. Noah Webster thought that a common language would bring people together and help create a new identity that would make the country truly independent of the British.

Webster's dictionary, now in its 11th edition, adopted the Americanised spellings familiar today - er instead of re in theatre, dropping the u from colour, and losing the double l from words such as traveller. It also documented new words that were uniquely American such as skunk, opossum, hickory, squash and chowder.


Full story here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20332763

Gandalf
December 30th, 2012, 09:26 AM
Online, English has become a common language for users from around the world. In the process, the language itself is changing.

When America emerged from the ashes of a bruising war with Britain in 1814, the nation was far from united. Noah Webster thought that a common language would bring people together and help create a new identity that would make the country truly independent of the British.

Webster's dictionary, now in its 11th edition, adopted the Americanised spellings familiar today - er instead of re in theatre, dropping the u from colour, and losing the double l from words such as traveller. It also documented new words that were uniquely American such as skunk, opossum, hickory, squash and chowder.


Full story here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20332763

That's really interesting thanks for sharing :)

MrDaniel2K13
December 30th, 2012, 12:19 PM
Interesting story to read

HowlingSnail
December 31st, 2012, 07:32 PM
This reminds me of a "Learn English" website I found. It was funny because it was in english.

Lost in the Echo
December 31st, 2012, 07:35 PM
Yeah that was a pretty interesting article.
Thanks for another cool story Karl. :)