Oddly, 'aluminum' is also a British word - according to wikipedia, it was coined by Thomas Young in 1812 and only became popular in the US after Noah Webster used it in his dictionary.
Apart from aluminum and soccer, I wonder what other 'Americanisations' are actually British in origin? Or, for that matter, vice versa?
that's pretty much a myth at this point, both are an unholy mixture of old and modern. like, americans say 'gotten' but are more likely to say 'i forgot', whereas british people say 'got' but are more likely to say 'i've forgotten'
Both forms are correct: 'I forgot' is simple past, 'I've forgotten' is present perfect. Nothing to do with British or American English, just different tenses.
This is true but it's very noticeable that US English speakers use the simple past where the rest of the English speaking world would use the present perfect.
I really had no clue on the Canary Island question. I was convinced it was asking for the name of a specific kind of canary and not a completely different animal :')
Per Wikipedia, it refers to "a theological and political concept asserting that [answer] is the successor of the Roman Empire, representing a "third Rome" in succession to the first Rome (Rome itself, capital of Ancient Rome) and the second Rome (Constantinople, capital of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire)."
Woohoo! One of these is from me! From my series of animal general knowledge quizzes: https://www.jetpunk.com/series/227350/general-knowledge-answers-are-animals This is the closest I've had to a feaure.
"Christopher Columbus, sailing for Spain, named the island as Dominica, after the Latin term 'dies Dominica' for Sunday, the day on which the Spanish first saw it in November 1493."
Any reason why "bombs" isn't accepted for Little Boy? I tried missiles cos I thought I might have been wrong about the delivery method, but it seems I was correct
Apart from aluminum and soccer, I wonder what other 'Americanisations' are actually British in origin? Or, for that matter, vice versa?
"Christopher Columbus, sailing for Spain, named the island as Dominica, after the Latin term 'dies Dominica' for Sunday, the day on which the Spanish first saw it in November 1493."