Originally Posted By: Gordon Scott
Originally Posted By: rayc
Actually, what we speak is rather closer to English than your own version.

That's distinctly moot. There is a good argument that American English has in many ways diverged less from the English of the early settlers than 'English' English has, the latter strongly influenced by imported language from other cultures, notably from India, but also from America and Australia and African Caribbean and so on.

Australian English was quite strongly influenced by Irish migrants.

The consequence is that it's hard so say which of those dialects is closest to 'true' English, whatever that might be.

We should celebrate both the differences and the similarities.



Just on the East Coast of the USA... you have the New England accent, the Boston accent, the New York City accent, the South Jersey accent, the southern accent, and the Georgia southern accent just for starters.... wait, I forgot the Outter Banks High tiders accent.... if you know English, there's no guarantee that you will be able to converse with some of those.... The High tiders are probably the hardest of the bunch to understand as it comes from the Irish or Scottish roots mixed into English.....


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