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  Kiya is a young woman with many interests. She's got a degree in Computer Science and Registered Nursing.
   She's an avid reader and considers Stephen King one of her favorite authors. 
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	Kiya's Big Book of Writing Guidelines  #525255 added August 2, 2016 at 10:38am Restrictions: None	 
	Do You Speak English? 
	Do You Speak English?  
 
Of approximately 6 billion people on Earth, over 30% speak English as their first language. An additional 7% speak English as a second language, having studied it in school. However, is it really the same language? Is the United Kingdom's English the same as that of the United States, or Australia, or Barbados, or Sierra Leone, or Ireland? The answer is a qualified 'yes'. While the residents of the British Isles have established the basis for the language, various countries and parts of countries have modified it to suit themselves. Such complexity is shown in this partial list of countries where English is considered to be the primary language:  
 
American Samoa, Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Canada, Cayman Islands, Grenada, Guyana, Ireland, Jamaica, Liberia, Montserrat, New Zealand, Nigeria, Northern Marianas, Papua New Guinea, St. Kitts, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Sierra Leone, Trinidad and Tobago, United Kingdom, United States.   
 
While all the English speaking people can presumably watch a television show and enjoy it through the common visual and language bond, the differences are also evident in puzzling words and phrases as well as almost automatic translations adjustments in vocabulary, phrase and accent. Just as Americans must on occasion strain to filter an unfamiliar New England accent or Southern accent through their own regional ears, the exuberant Australian English must present a challenge to Yorkshire understanding. 
 
We will highlight a few of the spelling  variations between British and American English. 
 
The -or/-our group: 
(Note that left side is American, the right is the British version) 
 
color/colour                                honor/honour 
vigor/vigour                                armor/armour 
labor/labour                                odor/odour 
flavor/flavour                                endeavor/endeavour 
valor/valour                                humor/humour 
savor/savour                                neighbor/neighbour 
 
The -ize/-ise group: 
(Note that left side is American, the right is the British version) 
 
Civilize/civilise 
Organize/organise 
Apologize/apologise 
Analyze/analyse 
Digitize/digitise 
Categorize/categorise 
Emphasize/emphasise 
Realize/realise/realisation 
Colonize/colonise/colonisers 
Colonization (for both American/British) 
 
The -er/-re group: 
(Note that left side is American, the right is the British version) 
 
Center/centre                                somber/sombre 
Fiber/fibre                                meager/meagre 
Liter/litre                                specter/spectre 
Theater/theatre 
 
The -eo/-oeo group: 
(Note that left side is American, the right is the British version) 
 
Esophagus/oesophagus                                fetus/foetus 
Estrogen/oestrogen                                fetid/foetid 
 
Other Words: 
 
Aluminum/ aluminium 
Trapezoid/trapezium 
Gasoline/petrol 
Main street/high street 
Story/storey (of a building) 
Check/cheque 
Sulfur/sulphur 
 
Some differences are as simple as familiar words or familiar things that are practically synonyms, easily used interchangeably on both sides of the Atlantic, as are the following examples: 
 
 
 
One of the interesting differences between British and American English is the tendency for the British to lengthen words or phrases as in:  
 
I have done                                I have 
Departmental store                      department store 
 
Or perhaps it’s the Americans who tend to shorten things.   
 
Some words or phrases can cause great misinterpretation because the British/American meanings may be different – in some cases completely opposite. Here is a sampling of the intricacies and color/colour of our glorious language: 
 
  If a motion picture or play is dubbed a ‘bomb’, it is a dismal failure in the America but a smashing success in England. 
 
  An American might want a ‘cookie’, but must ask for a ‘biscuit’ in England. 
 
  In England a ‘casket’ is a small box; Americans use casket interchangeably with ‘coffin’. 
 
  An American might wander through the woods with a 'flashlight', but you will require a 'torch'  in England to do that. 
 
  Americans following the rules of parliamentary procedure might ‘table’ an item to set it aside without further consideration, but in England the item would be submitted for discussion. 
 
  Tell your visiting English friend to hang his clothes in the ‘closet’ and he will hang them in the watercloset (bathroom). If you are his guest, he does not expect you to hang your wardrobe in the kitchen when he tells you the ‘cupboard’ is available.  
 
  In England, a lady’s handbag should never be called a pocketbook – that term is reserved for a gentleman’s billfold or notecase. 
 
  Can you count to a billion? In England that is 1,000,000,000,000 (called a trillion in the U.S) but in the U.S. it is only one thousand million (1,000,000,000 and called a milliard in England). 
 
  In Australia, 'lollies' are sweet treats; Americans use the word 'candy'. 
 
  In America it is commonly regarded as 'Jelly'; In Australia 'Jam or Preserves'. 
 
  Americans refer to this fruit as 'cantaloupe'; In Australia it is considered a 'rockmelon'. 
 
Yes, we speak the same language, but the dialects need translation on occasion. We are all better for our willingness to learn to communicate in our own or an adopted language.  
 
 
 Please check out this forum for writers who do not speak English as a first language. l have no doubt it will be beneficial in the long run!   
 
 
 
 
Source: The Volume Library - A Modern, Authoritative Reference for Home and School Use 
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