Comment on Anon hates aluminum
Skua@kbin.social 7 months agoYes if you're American or Canadian, no if you're British, Australian, or New Zealander, and other varieties of English I'm afraid I'm not sure about
Comment on Anon hates aluminum
Skua@kbin.social 7 months agoYes if you're American or Canadian, no if you're British, Australian, or New Zealander, and other varieties of English I'm afraid I'm not sure about
rainynight65@feddit.de 7 months ago
Not to mention many other languages that use two i’s:
German, French: Aluminium Spanish, Portuguese: Aluminio Italian: Alluminio
Just to name a few.
‘Aluminum’ is just yet another instance where American English decided to be different for the sake of it, without any rhyme or reason.
captainlezbian@lemmy.world 7 months ago
The discoverer used both
NielsBohron@lemmy.world 7 months ago
I actually read somewhere that lots of those instances were actually England deciding to be different so they could look down on “the colonies.” The extra u in color and favorite, all those random e’s, etc. were actually added later to look “old-timey.”
Now, on a lazy Sunday afternoon, I can’t be bothered to actually find a source, but I remember the source being trustworthy, so take that however you like.
rainynight65@feddit.de 7 months ago
First source I could find:
drawingsof.com/color-or-colour/
The claim on England looking down on the colonies wouldn’t check out of you consider that -or in favour of -our is only used in the US, none of the other former colonies (not even Canada).
NielsBohron@lemmy.world 7 months ago
You know, while sitting around avoiding work on a Monday, I remembered my source: some British dude living in the American Midwest talking about random words on YouTube (I think his channel is “Lost in the Pond” or something like that). The specifics he referenced were “axe/ax,” “kerb/curb,” and “tyre/tire.” In each case, there was a settled spelling shared Great Britain and North American English (the latter of each pair), and for some reason England made up a new spelling or reverted to an even older spelling in the late 19th century (Wikipedia source)
So I wasn’t completely fabricating things, but it was much more specific than I remembered.
NielsBohron@lemmy.world 7 months ago
There you go. That’s what I get for trusting random bits of unsourced memory.