Poll: Colour or Color?

Recommended Videos

onewheeled

New member
Aug 4, 2009
1,225
0
0
I like the way it looks with the U, but for all my fifteen years, I've spelled it "color".

Now that I think about it though, when it's spelled "colour", it seems like it should be pronounced differently. Like emphasis on the OU, pronounced as a heavy O.
 

AWDMANOUT

New member
Jan 4, 2010
837
0
0
Colour.

I'm American, but I accidentally texted it like that to my girlfriend once, and we both decided to spell it that way from then on lol.
 

ottenni

New member
Aug 13, 2009
2,996
0
0
Kortney said:
It's not just colour British colonies chuck a 'U' in, is it? Favour and honour are two more, surely there is even more?

ottenni said:
But you can still carry me down the street if you like.
Done deal!
Yaaaaaay!

Also, don't forget Armour. Which funnily enough i pronounce arma.
 

MasterChief892039

New member
Jun 28, 2010
631
0
0
I'm Canadian but here's how it is - Australia, Canada, and The United States were all once British Colonies. The British spelling has a "u", and therefore it's colonies spell it with a "u". America is the only country that perverted the British spelling, and yet today I always get Americans telling me I spell things funny - no guys. Australia/Canada/Britain all spell things the same. You Americans are the ones that are weird.
 

Cain_Zeros

New member
Nov 13, 2009
1,494
0
0
The spell it "color" down south, but up here in Canada, as you said, it's "colour". Firefox's spell check doesn't even say otherwise, since I have the Canadian English Dictionary add-on ('cause UK English just isn't good enough for the truly patriotic).
 

Jewrean

New member
Jun 27, 2010
1,101
0
0
Australian. Colour. There doesn't need be a reason. And people that complain about a missing letter (or an extra one) are idiots. /thread
 

Treblaine

New member
Jul 25, 2008
8,682
0
0
Depends, if I am using it in a phrase I made myself:

"My favourite colour is blue... NO GREEN!"

Then I'd use a "u" as that's the way it is spelt in the UK and as a UK citizen I should continue to use that spelling.

But if a quote or movie title used the US spelling:

"Color Purple"

Then I would not alter the spelling to "colour" if I repeated the title. It is an American name, quote or title therefore it should keep the American spelling. I expect the same in return for British titles and so on.

So: "I am anticipating the new game from EA; 'Medal of Honor', though I wonder how much the game really has to do with medals or Honour"

I think we can ALL learn a lot from the likes of Mark Twain and William Shakespeare who never cared much about the semantics of spelling and would both often make up new spellings as they saw fit. I don't give a damn... I spell colour with a U out of force of habit but I respect other spellings in other English speaking countries.