British and American English: Difference between revisions

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British English and American English have numerous differences in the areas of vocabulary, spelling, and phonology. This article compares standard British, which includes the accent known as Received Pronunciation, or RP, and standard American speech, in this case using Midland American English, which is usually perceived to be the least marked American dialect. Grammatical and lexical differences between British and American English are, for the most part, common to all dialects, but there are many regional differences in pronunciation, vocabulary, usage and slang, some subtle, some glaring, some rendering a sentence incomprehensible to a speaker of another variant.

American and British English both diverged from a common ancestor, and the evolution of each language is tied to social and cultural factors in each land. Cultural factors can affect one's understanding and enjoyment of language; consider the effect that slang and double entendre have on humour. A joke is simply not funny if the pun upon which it is based can't be understood because the word, expression or cultural icon upon which it is based does not exist in one's variant of English.

But it is not only humour that is affected. Items of cultural relevance change the way English is expressed locally. A person can say "I was late, so I Akii-Bua'd (from John Akii-Bua, Ugandan hurdler) and be understood all over East Africa, but receive blank stares in Australia. Even if the meaning is guessed from context, the nuance is not grasped; there is no resonance of understanding. English is a flexible and quickly-evolving language; it simply absorbs and includes words and expressions for which there is no current English equivalent; these become part of the regional English. American English has hundreds of loan words acquired from its immigrants: these can eventually find their way into widespread use, (spaghetti, mañana), or they can be restricted to the areas in which immigrant populations live. So there can be variances between the English spoken in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco. Thanks to Asian immigration, a working-class Londoner asks for a cuppa cha and receives the tea he requested. This would probably be understood in Kampala and New Delhi as well, but not necessarily in Boise, Idaho.

Cultural exchange also has an impact on language. For example, it is possible to see a certain amount of Americanization in the British English of the last 50 years. This influence is not entirely one-directional, though, as, for instance, the previously BrE 'flat' for 'apartment' has gained in usage among American twentysomethings. Similarly the American pronunciation of 'aunt' has changed during the last two decades, and it is considered classier to pronounce 'aunt' in the Commonwealth manner, even for speakers who continue to rhyme 'can't' and 'shan't' with 'ant'. Australian English is based on the language of the Commonwealth, but has also blended indigenous, immigrant and American imports.

Applying these same phenomena to the rest of the English-speaking world, and it becomes clear that though the "official" differences between Commonwealth and American English can be more or less delineated, the English language can still vary greatly from place to place.

Vocabulary

British American
abseil rappel
anticlockwise counterclockwise
aubergine egg plant
autumn fall, autumn
barrister [courtroom representation] lawyer
beetroot beet
behove behoove
bill bill, check
bonnet hood
boot [of a car] trunk
braces suspenders
brackets (round brackets) parentheses
break [school] recess
car-park parking lot
chemist drugstore
chips (chipped potatoes) French fries [1]
cinema movie theatre
claret Bordeaux (wine)
cockerel, cock rooster
cornflour cornstarch
cotton [sewing] thread
courgette zucchini
crisps (potato crisps) chips (potato chips)
crossroads intersection
curriculum vitae (CV) résumé
curtains drapes, draperies, curtains
dishcloth, tea towel dishcloth, dishrag
drawing room [mostly obsolete: class connotations] living room
dual carriageway divided highway, freeway, Interstate
dustbin trash can, garbage can
dustman garbage collector, garbageman
eiderdown comforter
estate agent real estate agent, realtor
estate car, estate wagon station wagon
film movie [2]
flat flat, apartment[3]
fortnight, two weeks two weeks
football (Association football), soccer soccer
foyer lobby
full stop period
garden yard
give way [road sign] yield
grill broil
guard’s van caboose
hire rent
hock Rhine wine (white)
holiday vacation
hoover vacuum cleaner
ironmonger, ironmongery hardware dealer, hardware
jumper sweater
knickers panties
lift elevator
lend loan (as a verb)
lorry[4] truck
main subject [in education] major
maize corn [one type]
marrow squash
maths math
motorway Interstate, divided highway, freeway
mud guard fender [of a bike]
nappy diaper
off-licence liquor store
pants, underpants underwear, underpants
pavement sidewalk
petrol(eum) gasoline, gas
plane (aeroplane) plane (airplane)
plaster (sticking plaster) Band-Aid™, adhesive bandage
primary school elementary school
queûe, queue up stand in line, wait in line
railway railway, railroad
road road, pavement
rubber[5] eraser
rubbish trash, garbage
rug blanket
sacked fired
saloon sedan
silencer [car] muffler
skip dumpster
solicitor [mainly deskwork; cf barrister] lawyer
spanner wrench
subway pedestrian tunnel
swede [vegetable] turnip, rutabaga [depending on region]
sweets candy
sweetshop candy store
tap [water] faucet
tarmac(adam) tar
tea [sometimes] supper, dinner
tick [box in writing] check
tiffin[6] lunch, luncheon
timber lumber
tin can
tomato sauce, ketchup ketchup[7]
torch [with a battery] flashlight
trainers sneakers
treacle molasses
trousers trousers, pants
underground subway
vest undershirt
waistcoat vest
windscreen windshield
wing fender [of a car]
wood louse pill bug
Z [unofficially 'zed'] zee

Usage

  • The expression 'I guess', meaning 'I think', common in AmE, is not used in BrE.[8]
  • In British, one goes 'to hospital' or 'to university'; in American, one goes 'to the hospital' or 'to the university'. However, one goes 'to college' in both.
  • American English generally prefers the singular for collective nouns: 'the government is considering' where British has 'the government are...' Thus, while 'the United States is topping the medals table', 'England are losing another Test Match'.
  • Toss and flip: in British English, one tosses a coin, but in American, it is usually flipped.
  • In British, an ass (rarely used nowadays) is a donkey or a fool; in American it is used instead of 'arse'.
  • In British, mad means crazy; in American angry.
  • In British, to wash up, or to do the washing up, is to do the dishes; in American however it is to wash oneself, where BrE would say to wash one's face or have a wash.
  • What Americans call public schools are in Britain 'state schools', because 'public school' is the British term for a traditional fee-paying upper-class private school, of which Eton is the most famous example.

Spelling

There are a number of spelling differences, some systemic (most notably in suffixes), and others in individual words.

Suffixes

The most striking differences between the spelling of AmE and BrE are in these suffixes (the accents, which are not used in English, show stress and pronunciation: see English spellings for a table and English phonemes for a comparison with the International Phonetic Alphabet):

British - American -
-ence defénce -ense defénse
lîcence noun[9] lîcense
offénce offénse[10]
l + l + suffix dîalling -l + suffix dîaling
trávelled tráveled
màrvellous màrvelous[11]
-l fulfíl -ll fulfíll
enrôl enrôll
instål inståll
instíl instíll
-ógue cátalogue -óg cátalog
dîalogue dîalog
démagogue démagog
-our clámour -or clámor
còlour còlor
fâvour fâvor
flâvour flâvor
harbour harbor
hónour hónor
lâbour lâbor
ráncour ráncor
(Many words, however, have -or in both: dóctor, asséssor, sqùalor.)
-p + suffix kídnapping -pp + suffix kídnáping
wörshípped wörshíped
-re céntre[12] -er cénter
mêtre length mêter
manoeûvre maneûver (also no o)
ôchre (ch as k) ôcher (ch as k)
scéptre scépter
thêatre thêater
(But in both, mêter machine, not distance, eûchre *yûker)
-tt + suffix carburétted -t + suffix carburéted

-ise and -ize

Spellings with -ise are common in British English, but -ize has been for centuries the standard spelling of Oxford University Press (in contrast to Cambridge UP which uses -ise) and there is some evidence to suggest that the -ise variant predominated in the UK only after 1945; thus, a spelling such as 'realize' is not a good example of an 'American' spelling. The typical 'British' spelling reflects the French spelling from which these words were borrowed, though many originally came from Greek -ιζειν (-izein, with a zeta) via Latin. Some words, such as 'advertise', can supposedly only be spelt with -s- regardless of which side of the Atlantic they are used; however, spellings such as 'advertize' are readily found nowadays.

ae and oe become e

In Latin and Greek words where British has ae or oe, AmE usually has a solitary e: aesthétic becomes esthétic and foêtus becomes fêtus.

Other spellings

Other individual spelling variations are:

British American
ádze ádz
alumínium alûminum[13]
ánalyse ánalyze
áxe áx
chéque money chéck all meanings
connéxion, connéction connéction only (cf. compléxion in both)
côsy côzy
diaérisis (both *dî-érisis) diérisis
dràught cold, net, liquids, game, horse dráft all meanings
fíllet fílet
furŏrê fûrŏr[14]
grèy grây
jeŵellery jeŵelry
júdgement júdgment[15]
largésse *larzhéss can also be largéss
môuld môld
moustàche mústache[16]
múm mother mòm
ómelette ómelet
páralyse páralyze
plòugh plòw
práctíse verb (BrE noun is práctíce) práctíce: AmE uses only práctíce, reflecting the pronunciation (not -î-).
prôgramme arts[17] prógram
pyjàmas pajàmas
refléxion, refléction refléction only (cf. compléxion in both)
roûble rûble
scéptical sképtical[18]
skílful skíllful
súlphur, súlphate, súlphide súlfur, súlfate, súlfide
tŷre car tîre car, tired
wílful wíllful

Also: dôve is an American alternative to dîved as past tense of dîve, with the same spelling as the bird dòve; matinée (pronounced mátinèe) normally has a written é accent in BrE but no accent in AmE.

The spelling dísc is preferred in Britain, while American prefers dísk, mainly confining the -c spelling to musical recordings. [1]

Initial capital letters

'Champagne' and 'Cointreau' have initial capitals in American English, as they are proprietary names; in British they both normally begin with a lower-case letter.

Pronunciation

The pronunciations discussed here are standard British (also called Received Pronunciation), which is associated with London and the Home Counties, and General American, heard in much of the United States and Canada.

Postvocalic r

Most strikingly, ‘postvocalic’ r, that is to say r after a vowel and in the same syllable, is silent in BrE, but pronounced in AmE, in words like fàrm, càrve, cürve, swërve, fïrst, nŏrth, cŏrd, bïrth, ëarth. For some speakers of both, it is heard finally before a vowel in the next word: 'My car isn't ready' ('rizzent') and even an invisible r can be heard: 'relations between China(r)and Russia'; this however is less common in BrE than it used to be.

An r between two vowels can have an effect on the first vowel: márry can sound like Mãry. The e in véry can sound like a stressed schwa. BrE has ór before a vowel but AmE always has ŏr: BrE órifice, órigin, fóreign, AmE ŏrifice, ŏrigin, fŏreign.

A word like móral can in AmE sound like *mŏrrl. BrE úr is AmE ür: BrE coúrage, cúrrency AmE coürage, cürrency and BrE òr is similarly altered: BrE wòrry AmE wörry.

a

BrE à is very often in AmE a long á: cán’t, lást, fást, hálf, ráther, láther. But not in fàther, Coloràdo, Chicàgo (Sh-), pajàmas (BrE pyjàmas) nor before r: fàrm, stàrve nor before -lm: càlm, pàlm, bàlm. And in some place names where BrE has á, à is preferred by many Americans: one hears Milàn, Vietnàm, Ugànda and Ànkara.

The suffix -ary has a silent a in traditional BrE, but in AmE it is sounded as é: díctionary, vocábulary (*dícshənéry, vəcábyəléry). Indeed, featuring as it does in so much in pop music, the AmE sound has become increasingly common in BrE, and this is also the sound of both varieties in the equivalent adverbs: necessarily (*néssəssérily). Similarly in BrE labóratory AmE láboratŏry one o is stressed, rendering the other redundant: BrE *labóratry, AmE *lábratŏry. Similarly cátegŏry, perémptŏry in AmE, and also céremôny, álimôny and ácrimôny where BrE has o as schwa. However, both varieties have a schwa sound for the a when the preceding syllable is the stressed one: suppleméntary (*súpləméntəry), compliméntary (*compləméntəry).

BrE åu and åw are AmE àu and àw: BrE åwful, låw, cåught, AmE àwful, làw, càught, but BrE AmE wår, AmE wårrior BrE ẁarrior. BrE ŏught and is AmE *ót or *àt; similarly with cåught, bŏught, fŏught and other words with this ending (see English spellings, Retroalphabetical List).

Short o

The [ɒ] (ó) vowel in BrE hot does not exist for the vast majority of AmE speakers, as it developed following the establishment of colonies in the New World (Australians do use it, since Australia was colonised later). AmE may employ a variety of vowels in this position, depending on the phonological context and the speaker's regional background - [ɔ], [ɑ] or others in roughly the same area of the mouth, low and towards the back. They also make distinctions through the use of r, which for BrE speakers are homophonous: court and caught both use [ɔː], whereas AmE speakers pronounce the r in the former: [kɔɹt] and [kɔt], for example. So also, American hót sounds like British heàrt.

wh-

In words beginning wh- (apart from who, which is pronounced *hoô in both varieties) the h is ignored in BrE but sounded before the w in AmE, so that whén and whístle are pronounced *hwén and *hwíssle.

-ile

The suffix -île in BrE is usually schwa in AmE so that vólatîle becomes *vólatle, stérîle *stérral, frágîle *frájle and míssîle *míssle, sounding like míssal prayers.

-duce

The suffix -dûce, as in redûce, indûce, prodûce verb and próduce noun is dyoôss or -joôss in BrE but -doôss in AmE.

-age

In three similar words from French, where BrE has an anglicised version, AmE prefers to keep the French model, so á in the first syllable cedes its stress to the suffix -àge (this is not to be confused with the cockney pronunciation of 'garage' as 'garridge', for example):

British American
bárràge (-àzh) barràge (*bəràzh)
gáràge (-àzh) garàge (*gəràzh)
mássàge (-àzh) massàge (*məssàzh)

-t- and -d- between vowels

In AmE -t- and -d- between vowels, of which the first vowel is stressed, are voiced and sound like -d-, though actually the sound is a [ɾ] (a 'tap' or 'flap', i.e. a very rapid contact just behind the top front teeth): lâter, *lâ[ɾ]er, bútter, *bú[ɾ]er, lítter, *lí[ɾ]er, shoôting, *shoô[ɾ]ing; BrE speakers keep these as -t- or -d-. In AmE twénty, -t- blends with the n and disappears altogether. The 'flap' often appears as the Scottish English pronunciation of /r/. BrE speakers often partially or completely 'glottalise' -t- where AmE speakers produce a flap. This glottal stop [ʔ] is common in London English, for example: bu[ʔ]er 'butter'. It also often replaces /t/ at the end of a syllable: ca[ʔ] 'cat'. The glottal stop, which is formed by the vocal cords briefly coming together to restrict airflow, is not a phoneme of English and so speakers will usually identify it as a variant of -t-.

-euse

This ending has two pronunciations in AmE: in words such as AmE masseûse, the final e can also be sounded: chanteûsê. BrE has only the French-style massëuse, rhyming with the masculine plural form massëurs.

Other pronunciations

Other individual differences are as follows (= means that the pronunciation is the same):

British American
addréss áddress
ádult adúlt
advërtísement ádvertîsement (cf. ádvertise in both)
alumínium alûminum (different spelling, too)
Al-Qàêda (-Kŷda, or stress on ê) Al-Qâeda
ámateur (eur as schwa: ámətə) ámateur also; or various more phonetic variants, typically ámateûr (*ámatyure)
ámbergrìs ámbergrís
amen *à-mén *â-mén
ántì- ántî-
ápparâtus (either stressed) apparátus
áristocrat arístocrat
ásthma (*ássma) *ázma
àunt áunt uncle (= ánt insect)
authóritative authŏritâtive
Baghdád Bághdad
Bërnard Bernàrd, generally, although not always[19]
bêta bèta
bòrough (*búrə) bòrôugh town (= búrrow ground)
càdre (-der) càdrè
cándidate (-ət) cándidâte
capíllary (kəp-) cápillãry
Caribbêan (*Cárri-bêən) Caríbbêan (-bêən)
Cécil (*Séssle) Cêcil (*Sêazle)
cérebral cerêbral
chágrín (sh-) chagrìn (*shəgrêen)
charàde (sh-) charâde (sh-)
cigarétte cígarette
clìchè clichè (where the American is closer to the French; the French accent may be written: cliché)
cómplex compléx
cómrâde cómráde
córrugate cörrugate
coyôtê *kîôte
dâta dáta
Dâvíes (= Dâvis) Dâvìês (-êez)
débris (*débrêe or dâybrêe) *dəbrêe; the French accent may be written: débris
derby (à) dërby
defénce dêfense (this pronunciation is for sport only, but always the different spelling)
dêtail detâil
dôcîle dócile (*dóssle)
dýnasty dŷnasty
económic, -al, -s (ê-) (é-)
Edinburgh (-brə) (-bórô)
eîther êither
entreprenëur entrepreneûr (both ón-)
êra éra (= BrE érror)
erâse (-z) erâse (-s)
ërr érr
évidently evidéntly
explêtive éxpletive
fålcon fálcon
fígure (*fígə) (can be *fígyùr)
fíllet rhymes with bíllet, t pronounced *filây (after French)
furŏrê fûror (different spelling, too)
gàla gâla
génuíne génuîne
gêyser water (= gêezer man) geŷser
grimâce grímace
hárass haráss
hegémony (híg-) hégemôny (héj-)
hërb *ërb
húrricane (a as schwa: -cən) hürricâne
ídyll idyllic îdyll = îdle lazy = îdol god
improvisâtion (o as schwa, -əvî-) improvisâtion (-óví-)
inquîry = enquîry ínquiry = enquiry (*ínkwəry)
îron (*îən) (*îrən or *îərn)
jágûar (*jágyûə) jáguàr (*jágwàr)
kílomêtre kilómeter (different spelling, too)
Kósovo Kôsovo
labóratory láboratŏry
Lébanon (-ən) Lébanón
léisure lêisure
lêver léver
lieuténant (léft-) (lût-)
massëuse (after French) masseûse
Maurice (= Mórris) Maurìce (*Mərìs, after French)
mãyor town (= mãre horse) mâyor
médicine (*médsən) (*médísən)
moôg *môag (can be capital M in both)
Móscôw can be Móscòw
moustàche (*məstàsh) mústache (*mústásh, also different spelling)
múltì- múltî-
Mùslim Múslim
nåusea (-zìə) (-shə)
neîther nêither
nónchalant (ch as sh) *nonshalàn
offénce óffense (sport only, but always)
paêdo- pédo- (different spelling, too)
páprika paprìka
partisán (-zán) pàrtisan (-zən)
pátronize, -ise pâtronize, -ise
përfume perfûme
prêdecessor prédecessor
prémier government premìêr (= premìêre)
prémiére performance premìêre (= premìêr)
prívacy prîvacy (but prîvate in both)
prôcess prócess
prôgress noun prógress noun: progréss verb in both
Pûerto Rìco (Pŏr-) Puérto Rìco (Pwãir-)
qùadruplet (second u as schwa) quadrûplet (similarly with quínt- etc.)
râbid rábid
récŏrd noun (rhyming with cŏrd) récord (o as schwa: -kərd)
renâissànce rénaissànce
resëarch rêsëarch
resŏurce rêsource
réspîte réspíte
roûte journey (= roôt plant) ròute (= ròut victory)
sándwich (-ídge) (-ích)
scenàrio scenãrio
schédule (shé-) (ské-)
simultâneous (sí-) (sî-)
spínach (-ídge) (-ích)
stâtus státus
stràta strâta (= BrE strâighter)
stràtum strâtum
thòrough (*thúrə) thòrôugh
tomàto tomâto [cf. potâto in both, ‘potàto’ being an invention of Cole Porter]
vàse (-z) vâse (*vâce, rhyming with báse)
vërmouth vermoûth
vítamin vîtamin
wåltz (-lss) wåltz as spelt
yógurt yôgurt

Notes

  1. Though strictly, these are two different shapes, chips being broader than fries.
  2. ‘Movie’ is nowadays normal in BrE when talking Hollywood.
  3. Increasingly heard in British English; in San Francisco, California, at least, a city of small, shared buildings, both "flat" and "apartment" are used, mostly interchangeably. Purists, however, distinguish between the two: an "apartment" is in a building that has a shared main entrance; a "flat" has its own outside entrance door.
  4. British trucks are traditionally small, and pulled, typically on rails.
  5. A pitfall for British visitors to America, where 'rubber' is a vulgar term for a condom.
  6. Used in India.
  7. In AmE, 'tomato sauce' refers to any kind but ketchup.
  8. "If any one were asked to give an Americanism without a moment's delay, he would be more likely than not to mention I guess. Inquiry into it would at once bear out the American contention that what we are often rude enough to call their vulgarisms are in fact good old English. I guess is a favourite expression of Chaucer's...But although it is good old English, it is not good new English" The King's English by H.W. Fowler and F.G. Fowler, Oxford University Press Third edition 1931, p 33)
  9. lîcense is the verb in BrE, cf. licensêe in both. Mostly -ence is used in both, as with fénce; but sénse, dénse and suspénse in both.
  10. In American sporting contexts, one may hear óffénse and dêfénse.
  11. but BrE wílful AmE wílful or wíllful
  12. And so in other forms: BrE céntred, AmE céntered.
  13. Also pronounced differently: ['æləmɪnjəm] in British English, [ə'lu:mɪnəm] in American.
  14. Also pronounced differently: [fjʊ'rɔri] in British English, ['fʊrɔr] in American.
  15. Also British legal use.
  16. Also pronounced differently: [mə'stɑʃ] in British English, ['mʌstæʃ] in American.
  17. prôgram computer is also BrE, but usually -grám in both: grám, dîagram, càrdiogram.
  18. The k spelling is of course more logical, cf. scêne view (= sêen see), scént smell (= sént send).
  19. St. Bernard's, a prominent, and exclusive, school for boys in New York City is pronounced in the British fashion.

See also