MrsHoneybee
Senior member
- Dec 29, 2002
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Originally posted by: Joemonkey
Gray seems like it is a flaming "person of certain sexuality" limping his wrist and yelling "Hayyyyy!"
Grey seems like it is a person of dignity drinking his brandy from a snifter and observing the color of his library tile's caulk stating "I say, that is quite a grey colour there" then drifting off into other intellectual thought
Originally posted by: jjzelinski
Originally posted by: Joemonkey
Gray seems like it is a flaming "person of certain sexuality" limping his wrist and yelling "Hayyyyy!"
Grey seems like it is a person of dignity drinking his brandy from a snifter and observing the color of his library tile's caulk stating "I say, that is quite a grey colour there" then drifting off into other intellectual thought
lol, usually synesthetes aren't quite as retarded but I say that in a good way since that was funny was hell.![]()
Originally posted by: Oxaqata
Grey. The British invented the language, so to speak, therefore their spelling is the most accurate.
Originally posted by: MrDudeMan
How do you spell it?
Either way is correct, but which way is natural for you to write?
Originally posted by: Oxaqata
Grey. The British invented the language, so to speak, therefore their spelling is the most accurate.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: Oxaqata
Grey. The British invented the language, so to speak, therefore their spelling is the most accurate.
This is not correct reasoning. The US and Britain speak different dialects of the language and therefore you cannot go around using the wrong dialect in the wrong area.
Do you call trucks "lorries"? When people break their arms, do you say they're wearing casts or splints? When you're looking for a tool that tightens bolts, do you ask for wrenches or spanners?
Originally posted by: FoBoT
i spell it both, i forget which i correct, then i guess
either way
Originally posted by: jw0ollard
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: Oxaqata
Grey. The British invented the language, so to speak, therefore their spelling is the most accurate.
This is not correct reasoning. The US and Britain speak different dialects of the language and therefore you cannot go around using the wrong dialect in the wrong area.
Do you call trucks "lorries"? When people break their arms, do you say they're wearing casts or splints? When you're looking for a tool that tightens bolts, do you ask for wrenches or spanners?
What? Those aren't the greatest examples since "gray" and "grey" sound the exact same.
That's like saying you're not allowed to say "theatre" in America, when most people I know spell it that way.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: jw0ollard
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: Oxaqata
Grey. The British invented the language, so to speak, therefore their spelling is the most accurate.
This is not correct reasoning. The US and Britain speak different dialects of the language and therefore you cannot go around using the wrong dialect in the wrong area.
Do you call trucks "lorries"? When people break their arms, do you say they're wearing casts or splints? When you're looking for a tool that tightens bolts, do you ask for wrenches or spanners?
What? Those aren't the greatest examples since "gray" and "grey" sound the exact same.
That's like saying you're not allowed to say "theatre" in America, when most people I know spell it that way.
What's hard to understand about that? Britain and the US spell certain words differently. In the US the correct spelling is "gray". In Britain the correct spelling is "grey".
If your friends are using an alternate spelling for a word, they're just spelling it wrong. That's either because a) they simply don't know any better, or b) They're trying to sound cultured/elitist and failing at it miserably. In either case they are incorrect.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: jw0ollard
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: Oxaqata
Grey. The British invented the language, so to speak, therefore their spelling is the most accurate.
This is not correct reasoning. The US and Britain speak different dialects of the language and therefore you cannot go around using the wrong dialect in the wrong area.
Do you call trucks "lorries"? When people break their arms, do you say they're wearing casts or splints? When you're looking for a tool that tightens bolts, do you ask for wrenches or spanners?
What? Those aren't the greatest examples since "gray" and "grey" sound the exact same.
That's like saying you're not allowed to say "theatre" in America, when most people I know spell it that way.
What's hard to understand about that? Britain and the US spell certain words differently. In the US the correct spelling is "gray". In Britain the correct spelling is "grey".
If your friends are using an alternate spelling for a word, they're just spelling it wrong. That's either because a) they simply don't know any better, or b) They're trying to sound cultured/elitist and failing at it miserably. In either case they are incorrect.