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#31
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"Yowie" wrote in message
... wrote in message ... I'd like to pause for just a moment, to have a tangential linguistic discussion. Singh wrote: Just to be on the safe side, Louie rigged up the dresser so she can't get beneath it now. So at least if she does go down cellar, we have some idea of how and where to find her. Oh, *WOW*!! I haven't heard the phrase "go down cellar" for years! (It means "go down to the basement", for the uninitiated.) But that's how my mother always said it. I just had a childhood flashback! I'm from Boston. My parents are from Boston. All of their parents were born in Boston, too. So I'm thinking maybe "down cellar" is a Boston-ism. Or maybe a New England-ism? I always find it weird to hear the American term "I'll write you" rather than saying "I'll write *to* you". I don't know when the dropped "to" or the "to the" in your case above first started to be thought of as correct grammar in American English, but to these Commonweatlth English ears, it always sounds wrong. But being quite ancient in terms of cuber-life, I've learnt that even "English" has distinct sub-languages, and no one particular dialect is any more "correct" than any other - just that some are "older". Ye Olde Yowieth Just as I find it strange that British and Australians say someone is "in hospital", rather than "in *the* hospital". English is, indeed, a strange language, and the various ways it is spoken make it even stranger. Joy |
#32
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Yowie wrote: I always find it weird to hear the American term "I'll write you" rather than saying "I'll write *to* you". I don't know when the dropped "to" or the "to the" in your case above first started to be thought of as correct grammar in American English, but to these Commonweatlth English ears, it always sounds wrong. What I find even weirder is the comparatively new "I could care less", when what is so clearly meant is "I could NOT care less"! |
#33
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Yowie wrote: I always find it weird to hear the American term "I'll write you" rather than saying "I'll write *to* you". I don't know when the dropped "to" or the "to the" in your case above first started to be thought of as correct grammar in American English, but to these Commonweatlth English ears, it always sounds wrong. What I find even weirder is the comparatively new "I could care less", when what is so clearly meant is "I could NOT care less"! |
#34
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Yowie wrote: I always find it weird to hear the American term "I'll write you" rather than saying "I'll write *to* you". I don't know when the dropped "to" or the "to the" in your case above first started to be thought of as correct grammar in American English, but to these Commonweatlth English ears, it always sounds wrong. What I find even weirder is the comparatively new "I could care less", when what is so clearly meant is "I could NOT care less"! |
#35
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"Enfilade" wrote in message
om... We ALWAYS say go down cellar. I'm from a community of German immigrants who settled in Ontario. I still say that myself. My partner is from Prince Edward Island where "go down to the basement" is in use. Here's another one--what's that big soft thing you sit on in the living room? To us it's a couch, but my grandmother calls it "a chesterfield." --Fil Neither - we call it a sofa. Hugs, CatNipped |
#36
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"Enfilade" wrote in message
om... We ALWAYS say go down cellar. I'm from a community of German immigrants who settled in Ontario. I still say that myself. My partner is from Prince Edward Island where "go down to the basement" is in use. Here's another one--what's that big soft thing you sit on in the living room? To us it's a couch, but my grandmother calls it "a chesterfield." --Fil Neither - we call it a sofa. Hugs, CatNipped |
#37
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"Enfilade" wrote in message
om... We ALWAYS say go down cellar. I'm from a community of German immigrants who settled in Ontario. I still say that myself. My partner is from Prince Edward Island where "go down to the basement" is in use. Here's another one--what's that big soft thing you sit on in the living room? To us it's a couch, but my grandmother calls it "a chesterfield." --Fil Neither - we call it a sofa. Hugs, CatNipped |
#38
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Yoj wrote:
...I find it strange that British and Australians say someone is "in hospital", rather than "in *the* hospital". That sounds strange to me, too, simply because I'm not used to it. But I thought about it, and decided that the British and Australian way makes more sense. After all, if you say "in THE hospital", you must be talking about a specific hospital, LOL! At least, that's how it must sound to an Aussie or Brit (does it?). Joyce - I still say "in the hospital" because otherwise people would think I was putting on airs! |
#39
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Yoj wrote:
...I find it strange that British and Australians say someone is "in hospital", rather than "in *the* hospital". That sounds strange to me, too, simply because I'm not used to it. But I thought about it, and decided that the British and Australian way makes more sense. After all, if you say "in THE hospital", you must be talking about a specific hospital, LOL! At least, that's how it must sound to an Aussie or Brit (does it?). Joyce - I still say "in the hospital" because otherwise people would think I was putting on airs! |
#40
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Yoj wrote:
...I find it strange that British and Australians say someone is "in hospital", rather than "in *the* hospital". That sounds strange to me, too, simply because I'm not used to it. But I thought about it, and decided that the British and Australian way makes more sense. After all, if you say "in THE hospital", you must be talking about a specific hospital, LOL! At least, that's how it must sound to an Aussie or Brit (does it?). Joyce - I still say "in the hospital" because otherwise people would think I was putting on airs! |
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