(January 17, 2016 at 8:18 pm)Yeauxleaux Wrote: I'm from Birmingham, but irrelevant : I spell my name like this just because I like the Frencheaux spelling, it's not a regional British thing.I will listen for that a sound when playing my audio books. I have to assume their dramatizations are authentic British. They’re professionals. Some of them speak what sounds like “the Kin’s English” and some of them sound like they speak British street English which is hard to follow. But I will listen more closely.
Northern British people say "Ant" instead of "Aunt" as well sometimes. They also say "laff" for "laugh" like Americans do, although they do it with an even shorter, harsher "a" sound that Americans don't seem able to make. British people, in all regions, have a really hard quick "a" sound that you'd hear in words like "cat" or "tacky", but American's don't seem able to form it the way we can. When I hear Americans say "a" it always comes out more like a breathy or nasaly "e" or "ah".
I wasn't aware the spellings had changed in English since Medieval times though, I thought it was all the same standardised written English by like the 1400s.
I don’t recall the kinds of changes Redbeard spoke of, either. Did he say when that happened?
But there were other changes. Particularly the shift away from Elizabethan/Shakespearean/King James English which was still spoken by the American Quakers in the 19th century.
I may be wrong but I believe the letter J was introduced in the 16th or 17th century.
The god who allows children to be raped out of respect for the free will choice of the rapist, but punishes gay men for engaging in mutually consensual sex couldn't possibly be responsible for an intelligently designed universe.
I may defend your right to free speech, but i won't help you pass out flyers.
Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.
--Voltaire
Nietzsche isn't dead. How do I know he lives? He lives in my mind.
I may defend your right to free speech, but i won't help you pass out flyers.
Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.
--Voltaire
Nietzsche isn't dead. How do I know he lives? He lives in my mind.