Coming Soon đ At the beginning of April, youâll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
I know a man who always says âheighthâ. Drives me nuts. In laws say "clifft, armoradillo, fox (meaning âfauxâ). For some reason, I find that funny and it doesnât bother me at all. Go figure.
I very much liked the southern draw they have in south Alabama, although I needed some time to get to understand it, as they have regular deviations from âStandard Englishâ (regarding grammar and phonetics, not to mention different word usage and customs).
One thing that bothers me, and it shouldnât; itâs just how or where such ones were raised, is axe instead of ask. âI donât know, let me axe my mother.â Yet, I have never heard it the other way around. âGrab an ask from the tool shed, will you?â
Mispronunciations bother me much less (when they bother me at all), than misspellings. Maybe itâs because, when you can actually see the letters, thereâs less excuse for getting it wrong.
Of course, then you get the differences between American and British spelling. Isnât it nice that weâll always have something to argue about?
Why isnât âpalindromeâ a palindrome? Youâd think someone would come up with a name for it that works. My favorite: Doc, note. I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod.
StephenRice almost 6 years ago
Iâll take the Fiftht on this one.
Algolei I almost 6 years ago
How lit was his schoolâs teacher?
Ratbrat almost 6 years ago
I know a man who always says âheighthâ. Drives me nuts. In laws say "clifft, armoradillo, fox (meaning âfauxâ). For some reason, I find that funny and it doesnât bother me at all. Go figure.
Ray*C almost 6 years ago
Why doesnât onomatopoeia sound like itself?
Spock almost 6 years ago
I very much liked the southern draw they have in south Alabama, although I needed some time to get to understand it, as they have regular deviations from âStandard Englishâ (regarding grammar and phonetics, not to mention different word usage and customs).
Nuliajuk almost 6 years ago
On another note, why do we have âwarmthâ but not âcoolthâ?
SamJuan almost 6 years ago
You, kind yet intriguing internet commenter, just blowed my mind.
Satchel,Koko,LDL,Kenny almost 6 years ago
My mom always said Dr. âThâomas for our dentist. And she was never wrong.
Stephen Gilberg almost 6 years ago
Oops, an extraneously capitalized âThat.â
ekke almost 6 years ago
Yes, itâs an anguish languish. I do feel sorry for immigrants who have to learn this language with all its inconsistencies.
Jeff0811 almost 6 years ago
One thing that bothers me, and it shouldnât; itâs just how or where such ones were raised, is axe instead of ask. âI donât know, let me axe my mother.â Yet, I have never heard it the other way around. âGrab an ask from the tool shed, will you?â
gisn8 almost 6 years ago
I just realized Iâve heard several around here pronounce it fift and sixt. Like the h is silent.
cmxx almost 6 years ago
The oddity I hear sometimes is âeighthâ being pronounced âaith.â
Kaputnik almost 6 years ago
Mispronunciations bother me much less (when they bother me at all), than misspellings. Maybe itâs because, when you can actually see the letters, thereâs less excuse for getting it wrong.
Of course, then you get the differences between American and British spelling. Isnât it nice that weâll always have something to argue about?
Ray*C almost 6 years ago
Why isnât âpalindromeâ a palindrome? Youâd think someone would come up with a name for it that works. My favorite: Doc, note. I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod.