Humanities & Cultures
Human society and cultural news, studies, and other things of that nature. From linguistics to philosophy to religion to anthropology, if it's an academic discipline you can most likely put it here.
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You've gotten to be kidding... /s
As an English as an n-th language speaker, I'm much less picky about regional dialects, and tend to bunch them all up together... then rely on autocorrect — or the occasional Google search — to pick up on slang and regionalisms.
From a correlation to Spanish/Latin tenses, and the etymology of "got + -en", I got the impression that "gotten" was closer to a strictly pluscuamperfect meaning, with "got" being a more simplified replacement for all past participles.
Does that make any sense?
I won't concede any part of American English until they start pronouncing "aluminum" instead of "aluminium".
We found the element, so we got to name it, and it doesn't matter if it breaks with the naming convention that was already established.
'Aluminum' was coined before 'aluminium' was.
That misses the whole part of the article.
I can launch into a tirade using Southern English, but I choose not to. Nana was English (you'll note that I sometimes don't lump it into the UK), so when I was up in Seattle visiting, I heard "aluminium" a lot.
"Here's," as my college roommate would say, "this about that." It's inconsistent with other elements on the periodic table, sure. We don't speak of "sodum" or any such nonsense. Caesesum would be a terrible idea to throw into a lake.
It's just customary. We don't have the same size pints, either, but no one's up in arms.
It's just a weird thing I have now that I'm a chemistry major. 🤣
I love my friends and family across the pond.
I often pull out that linguistically, my Appalachian dialect of English is closer to Elizabethan English than anything else spoken today. 🙂
In the end, it doesn't really matter to anyone except pedants.
Sodinium
Ah yes, Shakespeare. America's first and finest playwright. I hope the British can remove his influence from their language.
You have not truly experienced Shakespeare until you've heard it in the original Klingon.
I really enjoy the scene where Titus Adronicus uses his bat'leth to defend the honor of his house. Using the entrails of his daughter's attackers to make gagh was inspired.
I'm relatively certain David Warner played Adronicus at some point.