Difference between revisions of "Syntactic differences between dialects of English"

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* —whereas JNW: "I didn't want that stuff either, oh well"
 
* —whereas JNW: "I didn't want that stuff either, oh well"
 
* apparent grammaticalised use of "that one" as a demonstrative, whereas JNWEnglish differentiates between "that one" and "that stuff", and if grammaticalised, are grammaticalised separately for mass and count nouns
 
* apparent grammaticalised use of "that one" as a demonstrative, whereas JNWEnglish differentiates between "that one" and "that stuff", and if grammaticalised, are grammaticalised separately for mass and count nouns
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==Other people==
 
==Other people==

Revision as of 12:31, 19 November 2007

ABrE

ABraver's English shall henceforth be called "ABrE"

Argument order

  • "replace"
    • To show that item A has taken the place of item B, both of the following are acceptable in ABrE:
      • I replaced item A with item B
      • I replaced item B with item A
    • But:
      • Item A was replaced by item B
      • # Item B was replaced by item A

Pronuncimamations

'Regular'

  • abraver: [ɻejgjɯlɻ]
  • jonw: [ɻɛgjɯlɻ]

[and for the record, jonw is stupid]


TaMclE

Tristan's dialect of AusE.

Argument of "stop"

  •  %"but will usually stop other places if hailed"

Aspectual differences

  • *"Did you eat yet?" ("Have you eaten yet?")
  • —whereas JNW: √"Did you eat yet?" ("Have you eaten yet?")

"That one"

  • "I didn't want that one either, oh well" (as person puts ketchup on a wrap)
  • —whereas JNW: "I didn't want that stuff either, oh well"
  • apparent grammaticalised use of "that one" as a demonstrative, whereas JNWEnglish differentiates between "that one" and "that stuff", and if grammaticalised, are grammaticalised separately for mass and count nouns


Other people

Things that other people say that freak me out that they're grammatical