I admit there's hundreds of reasons why the world can't stand Americans, but this list is very nit-picky. A lot of the replies to this thread from Americans, however, have definitely put them back in their place.
I have never heard a single American pronounce the letter "H" with an actual "H" sound, did you not check that link? hit the play button and it CLEARLY says "Aitch"Mr. Brightside said:Aitch.gmaverick019 said:...still, how do you pronounce the letter "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:Woops, I meant Haitch!gmaverick019 said:....how the hell do you pronounce "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:One pronunciation that really annoys me, is H, as Aitch, I mean WTF?
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/H
put them back in there place...Draitheryn said:I admit there's hundreds of reasons why the world can't stand Americans, but this list is very nit-picky. A lot of the replies to this thread from Americans, however, have definitely put them back in their place.
Wasn't really getting defensive, most of this list confuses me anyway, probably due to being from Oklahoma where most of those phrases aren't used or only sound like that cause we have a hard time pronouncing some things.Booze Zombie said:snips
That is because I wasn't talking about Americans.gmaverick019 said:I have never heard a single American pronounce the letter "H" with an actual "H" sound, did you not check that link? hit the play button and it CLEARLY says "Aitch"Mr. Brightside said:Aitch.gmaverick019 said:...still, how do you pronounce the letter "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:Woops, I meant Haitch!gmaverick019 said:....how the hell do you pronounce "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:One pronunciation that really annoys me, is H, as Aitch, I mean WTF?
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/H
put them back in there place...Draitheryn said:I admit there's hundreds of reasons why the world can't stand Americans, but this list is very nit-picky. A lot of the replies to this thread from Americans, however, have definitely put them back in their place.
how so? since apparently you are so high and mighty of the cultural differences police, please, tell me.
Yes, apparently broad generalizations make you a better person than us Americans.Draitheryn said:I admit there's hundreds of reasons why the world can't stand Americans, but this list is very nit-picky. A lot of the replies to this thread from Americans, however, have definitely put them back in their place.
gmaverick019 said:....how the hell do you pronounce "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:One pronunciation that really annoys me, is H, as Aitch, I mean WTF?
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/H
'Haich' is very common in Australia but not in England, it seems. I was brought up on my ingrained Australianism by many British speakers, and as I am an English teacher, I changed. The official pronunciation of the letter is unchanged.Mr. Brightside said:Woops, I meant Haitch!gmaverick019 said:....how the hell do you pronounce "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:One pronunciation that really annoys me, is H, as Aitch, I mean WTF?
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/H
RAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGGGGGGGGGGGGEEEEEEECOULDJUSTDOESNTMAKESENSEYOUTWATSShock and Awe said:50. "I could care less" instead of "I couldn't care less" has to be the worst. Opposite meaning of what they're trying to say. Jonathan, Birmingham
then who were you talking about in the original post about the letter "H"?Mr. Brightside said:That is because I wasn't talking about Americans.gmaverick019 said:I have never heard a single American pronounce the letter "H" with an actual "H" sound, did you not check that link? hit the play button and it CLEARLY says "Aitch"Mr. Brightside said:Aitch.gmaverick019 said:...still, how do you pronounce the letter "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:Woops, I meant Haitch!gmaverick019 said:....how the hell do you pronounce "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:One pronunciation that really annoys me, is H, as Aitch, I mean WTF?
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/H
put them back in there place...Draitheryn said:I admit there's hundreds of reasons why the world can't stand Americans, but this list is very nit-picky. A lot of the replies to this thread from Americans, however, have definitely put them back in their place.
how so? since apparently you are so high and mighty of the cultural differences police, please, tell me.
I was speaking about the people who say Haitch, I was not saying Americans do it.gmaverick019 said:then who were you talking about in the original post about the letter "H"?Mr. Brightside said:That is because I wasn't talking about Americans.gmaverick019 said:I have never heard a single American pronounce the letter "H" with an actual "H" sound, did you not check that link? hit the play button and it CLEARLY says "Aitch"Mr. Brightside said:Aitch.gmaverick019 said:...still, how do you pronounce the letter "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:Woops, I meant Haitch!gmaverick019 said:....how the hell do you pronounce "H" ?Mr. Brightside said:One pronunciation that really annoys me, is H, as Aitch, I mean WTF?
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/H
put them back in there place...Draitheryn said:I admit there's hundreds of reasons why the world can't stand Americans, but this list is very nit-picky. A lot of the replies to this thread from Americans, however, have definitely put them back in their place.
how so? since apparently you are so high and mighty of the cultural differences police, please, tell me.
because apparently you said that you pronounce it "Aitch", in which I confirmed through my own use of the letter and the link I provided that in America we say "Aitch" also. I'm still curious as to what is different and who says it differently..
disregarding the arguments, I just saw your profile and your motto, is by one of my favorite if not my favorite quote ever to come from a tv show, so kudos to you for that from myself.Mr. Brightside said:le snip.
I can't imagine why, most Americans speak "proper" English better than most Brits--if there is such a thing as a "correct" version of a tongue that appears to have arisen from Vikings trying to speak Frenchified German with a Welsh accent. Or something like that.SilentCom said:I think the Brits just don't like us butchering their precious language...
Trolley always sounds idiotic to me. Trolleys run on rails and go ding. That wire thing is a cart. As for transport/transportation--in America, transport is a verb and transportation is a noun (usually--there are rare cases when transportation may be used as a verb, but they're usually referring to teleportation and thus fictional). If you say "transport" as a verb, you sound like you're faking British mannerisms....Shopping trolley ^-^
Come on. Are you serious?Bags159 said:Zebra = Zedebra? Genuinely curious.Mr. Brightside said:I'm Scottish and I have only ever heard people say "train station" I don't even know what else could be used (railway station perhaps, but it is a station for trains not railways.)
Also, it is ZED, end of discussion.
All in all that list sounded like a bunch of whining. Grow up and get a hobby if shopping cart really bothers you.
I do agree with the last one though.