Which English Do You Prefer?

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by Helvetii, Sep 27, 2009.

?

Which English?

  1. American :p

    38 vote(s)
    50.0%
  2. British :)

    38 vote(s)
    50.0%
  1. alistair80

    alistair80 Well-Known Member

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    #41
    I heard words like that around North London, Bristol etc...:)
     
    alistair80, Sep 28, 2009 IP
  2. danalingga

    danalingga Active Member

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    #42
    I prefer american because hollywood influence. :D
     
    danalingga, Sep 28, 2009 IP
  3. nowimhere

    nowimhere Active Member

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    #43
    English english, as in from England.
     
    nowimhere, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  4. Cheap SEO Services

    Cheap SEO Services <------DoFollow Backlinks

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    #44
    I thought English English wasn't plain English but a slight variation of English?
     
    Cheap SEO Services, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  5. ErikJ

    ErikJ Peon

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    #45
    Its the same languge just they come from different cultures. American English is much easier for many people to understand. And many British accents are just to funny sounding.
     
    ErikJ, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  6. Highena.com

    Highena.com Active Member

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    #46
    such as..?
     
    Highena.com, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  7. cool_78

    cool_78 Guest

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    #47
    I love British accents as well as their English ;)
     
    cool_78, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  8. silentsea

    silentsea Peon

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    #48
    i would go with American
     
    silentsea, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  9. Helvetii

    Helvetii Notable Member

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    #49
    Well Who likes Irish accent? Or even Aussie for that matter? :D
     
    Helvetii, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  10. Highena.com

    Highena.com Active Member

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    #50
    Nothing wrong with them. I guess you've never heard geordie or brummie accents then :D
     
    Highena.com, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  11. SOULZRIPPER

    SOULZRIPPER Well-Known Member

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    #51
    Both are cool. But it's just that the typical brits speak in a way that's too hard to understand for a non-English speaking person.
     
    SOULZRIPPER, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  12. Helvetii

    Helvetii Notable Member

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    #52
    What are geordie and brummie accents? :eek:
    Actually my spellcheck's telling me that there's no such thing :p
     
    Helvetii, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  13. theezy

    theezy Well-Known Member

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    #53
    American English. :)
    Outherwise I would be taulking likue thius, wiuth aull theuse euxtra luetters evuerywhere. :p
     
    theezy, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  14. rypher21

    rypher21 Active Member

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    #54
    british english..it's much formal
     
    rypher21, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  15. Highena.com

    Highena.com Active Member

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    #55
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geordie
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brummie

    hahaha, you think all english people sound like dick van dyke?
     
    Highena.com, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  16. mdvasanth86

    mdvasanth86 Notable Member

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    #56
    ROFL! You have actually Americanized "Americanized" .
    British English would be - Americanised. :)





    You are banned for a reason.:mad:

    :confused:.. I though it was the other way in Australia.



    I use both. :)
     
    mdvasanth86, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  17. Moses8595

    Moses8595 Peon

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    #57
    British English for me
     
    Moses8595, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  18. alex894

    alex894 Guest

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    #58
    I'd hit both.

    Firefox spell check disagrees. [​IMG]

    Pardon?
    Aussie chicks talking get me in the mood of love making very quickly.
    I don't live in Australia.
    American accents turn the horny on most Aussie girls, yes you got the idea.
     
    alex894, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  19. mdvasanth86

    mdvasanth86 Notable Member

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    #59

    Of course it will disagree for English (UK) words.:eek:
     
    mdvasanth86, Sep 29, 2009 IP
  20. greenicon

    greenicon Well-Known Member

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    #60
    British English :)
     
    greenicon, Sep 29, 2009 IP