Without wishing to be a pedant, The US form of old English is actually a truer reflection of 17th century English, than our coloquial form that we use today. It conforms to certain rules and structure, which ours no longer does.




Or yu could say they are just backward ;)
 
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Without wishing to be a pedant, The US form of old English is actually a truer reflection of 17th century English, than our coloquial form that we use today. It conforms to cwrtain rules and structure, which ours no longer does.




Or yu could say they are just backward ;)
We say "backwards" and it is our elegant heritage. :)
 
Without wishing to be a pedant, The US form of old English is actually a truer reflection of 17th century English, than our coloquial form that we use today. It conforms to cwrtain rules and structure, which ours no longer does.




Or yu could say they are just backward ;)

think its certain! cwrtain looks welsh and thats a whole new argument:)
 
The kiwis have fecked English as have the aussies and south Africans

Come to think of it so have scousers
 
The kiwis have fecked English as have the aussies and south Africans

Come to think of it so have scousers

Don't bring scousers into it, they can't argue back as their Giro's don't cover internet access ... unless they've pinched a mobile phone:rolleyes:
 

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