Two weeks is a fortnight. A two week cycle is 'fortnightly'.

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Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,920
2,162
126
I've never heard that term used anywhere in North America.

I laugh at you for making up a hodge-podge of words when a single word already exists.

I guess we're just smarter than j00

Like the rest of the world, I lump Canadians in with Yanks, btw.


Oh yeah? Well you guys call it WASHING UP LIQUID, and we just say Dish soap. You say AGRICULTURAL SHOW, we say Fair. You say ARTICULATED LORRY, we say trailer truck. You say GREASPROOF PAPER, we say wax paper. Some people in the UK call it LEMONADE, we call it Sprite or 7UP. NO OVERTAKING means no passing in the US.

That's all that come to mind right now...who's more efficient now Mr UK guy??? :D
 

Cristatus

Diamond Member
Oct 13, 2004
3,908
2
81
Originally posted by: dug777

I keep seeing 'bi-weekly' on here, and it strikes me as odd when there's already a perfectly good word in the English language for two weeks...

I'm guess it's just not in common usage in NA English?

Hehe. My favorite is quasi...I mean, what the eff? It's semi, not quasi!

(C)
 

Parasitic

Diamond Member
Aug 17, 2002
4,000
2
0
Originally posted by: Cristatus
Originally posted by: dug777

I keep seeing 'bi-weekly' on here, and it strikes me as odd when there's already a perfectly good word in the English language for two weeks...

I'm guess it's just not in common usage in NA English?

Hehe. My favorite is quasi...I mean, what the eff? It's semi, not quasi!

(C)

quasi- and semi- prefixes aren't really the same. Quasi is more along the line of "appearing to be" and semi is "half of"; the proper interchangable prefix for quasi is "pseudo-"

i.e.
"Semiphere" not "quaisphere"
"Psuedo-steady state" or "quasi-steady state" not "semi-steady state"
 
Sep 12, 2004
16,852
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Originally posted by: theprodigalrebel
Highly Technical - Intellectuals
P&N - Quasi-intellectuals
OT - Semi-intellectuals

Something like that?
Love and Relationships - Bi-intellectuals?

;)
 

dug777

Lifer
Oct 13, 2004
24,778
4
0
Originally posted by: Fritzo
I've never heard that term used anywhere in North America.

I laugh at you for making up a hodge-podge of words when a single word already exists.

I guess we're just smarter than j00

Like the rest of the world, I lump Canadians in with Yanks, btw.


You say ARTICULATED LORRY, we say trailer truck.

D

WTF mate ;)

IIRC the Poms say 'articulated lorry'.

We say 'road train' and that's because at 150 tonnes, we really do have road trains ;)

What do your trucks max out at? 50 tonnes? ;)
 

Q

Lifer
Jul 21, 2005
12,046
4
81
I'm a Yank and I've heard the word, and knew it was some duration of time but didn't know/care how long.
 

JujuFish

Lifer
Feb 3, 2005
11,508
1,077
136
Originally posted by: dug777
If we've got one word that works, why make up another, and a hyphenated word to boot :shudder;
Fortnightly is more awkward to say than biweekly, requiring a glottal stop. Also, "biweekly" isn't hyphenated.
 

imported_yovonbishop

Golden Member
Apr 19, 2004
1,091
0
0
Originally posted by: dug777

I keep seeing 'bi-weekly' on here, and it strikes me as odd when there's already a perfectly good word in the English language for two weeks...

I'm guess it's just not in common usage in NA English?

With the exception of when I read the word out loud when it was a question on millionaire, I don't think I've ever said "fortnight" or "fortnightly". It sounds too medieval for me.
 

LtPage1

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2004
6,311
2
0
I know what it means, but I've never heard anyone actually use it out loud.