Poll: Colour or Color?

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UberNoodle

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Apr 6, 2010
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RebellionXXI said:
Color, unless you want to be an elitist who uses archaic spelling and drinks tea out of tiny cups with their pinky finger sticking out.

I mean, come on! The 'u' in 'colour' is silent anyway. If 'colour' was pronounced 'col-ur' instead of 'col-or' then you might have a point. Either that or this debate would be whether or not the spelling should be 'colour' or 'colur'.

Hell, even Firefox's spell-checker disagrees with you; every instance of 'colour' I have in the reply editor is marked as a spelling error. I guess that's because I got the American English version instead of the British or Australian English version, but still.
Ahh, the 'archaic' argument. I am sure you are just joking around but just to comment on that: probably nothing is pure in English and to avoid any corruptions or archaisms would be a neverending endevour. So we remove a few U's from some words. Well what about all of the endless other examples of inconsistancy? Those U's and so on, reflect the history of their words. Since only learners of the language would need to spell phonetically (natives spell most words automatically from memory), a U here or not here, doesn't really matter. It could have an X in it, and natives would still know 'how to spell it'.
 

Infinatex

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May 19, 2009
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I was under the impression that it was 'colour' everywhere in the world except for the U.S.A.
 

kaveradeo

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Jul 12, 2010
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I think it helps pronunciation. In America its spelled color and pronounced cuhler. Isn't it longer like cuhloor or cuhlore in places where it's spelled colour? Same for armor "armer" and armour "armore."
 

child of lileth

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Jun 10, 2009
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Color, because I'm American. I like the other way better though, but I don't want to be a poser and use it for no reason.
 

UberNoodle

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Apr 6, 2010
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kaveradeo said:
Svizzara said:
I'm Canadian, so I spell it as ?colour?.
How do you pronounce it?
soren7550 said:
Color, because you don't pronounce any U's and because I'm American.
How about 'knife', 'gnat', 'phone', 'Queen', 'comfortable', etc?
Should it be 'nife', 'natt', 'fone', 'kween', and 'comftable'?
Spellings are just symbols collected together which represent what we generally agree for them to mean, so we COULD spell the words like that, if enough of us understood those spellings. Those letters only have sounds because we attribute those sounds to them. Look at languages like Japanese, where one Kanji character has at least two pronunciations, if not several. English is kind of messed up, no matter how you look at it, when it comes to consistancy in its rules, both in grammar and spelling. Many of those inconsistancies come from uneven changes in the language. There have been so many attempts to reform it. American English is the result of one such attempt. Many aspects of British English are also the result of reforms. But there is just so much that could be changed!
 

technoted

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Nov 9, 2009
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Being English I spell it colour, I get rather annoyed with the constant dumbing down of English spellings just to make it easier.
 

TheTaco007

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Sep 10, 2009
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I'm American and I still spell it colour. I don't care what spell-check says. I also spell gray with an e; grey.
 

Red Hood

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Sep 3, 2009
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It depends on the context. In the U.S.A, we spell it "color"; everywhere else they spell it "colour". It's like "grey" and "gray".
 

kaveradeo

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Jul 12, 2010
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Is there a difference in pronunciation? Can someone who uses colour type how they pronounce it?
 

UberNoodle

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Apr 6, 2010
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Deviltongue said:
UberNoodle said:
Deviltongue said:
Quite a few Former British colonies on this site...
I hope you are including the USA is that list. ;)
I mean, that still use British spelling for shit...
Well it might interest you to know that some so-called 'Americanisms' were not invented by American speakers at all, but rather are just words and phrases that were 'held on to'. Such differences were created when British English went through massive changes and the colonists in the Americas didn't, couldn't, 'get the memo' about it. I have found quite a few examples of English supposedly of American invention but which actually reflect how things used to be said.
 

Angus565

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Mar 21, 2009
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I live in Canada too so I was taught it's spelled Colour.
Apparently Firefox doesn't think so though.
 

SoranMBane

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May 24, 2009
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I spell it "colour" even though I'm American, mainly because I prefer the way it looks and because I also grew up reading a lot of British literature.
 

Carlan

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Nov 21, 2009
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It's colour. Why? Because we won the War of 1812, that's why. God save the Queen, bitches!
 

Tanfastic

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Aug 5, 2009
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"Color" unless i'm feeling fancy. Just like "Theater" instead of my fancy "Theatre".

Also, needs less random choice that's screws up poll results...