British for pretty much everything. by
the Irish Samurai
on 2015-08-03 22:01:00 UTC
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Apart from signifying speech. I use American-style double quote marks there, and I'm not really sure why.
I just know the doubles as speech marks and the singles as quote marks, but I don't know where/why I picked up that quirk. It wasn't until reading a PPC mission that mentioned the difference that I realised I was doing something slightly odd.
- Irish
It depends by
Hieronymus Graubart
on 2015-08-01 22:43:00 UTC
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I’m neither British nor American. I learned British English at school, but later I read lots of American texts. So, when I don’t use a spell checker, I probably mix it and use just what I remember best. Also, I may not always be aware that a word is specifically British or specifically American.
But then I try to always use a spell checker, and my main fandoms are British, so I should really try to write British English. On the other hand, my spell checkers default settings are German and American, and setting it to British is a bit tedious. So I actually write mostly American English. Unless I take the time and can justify the extra afford, like when I beta read for Brits.
HG
I mix them up... A LOT by
Matt Cipher
on 2015-08-01 07:59:00 UTC
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My vocabulary is Ameri-tish since I use candy, truck, zipper, and movie on one hand (AmE)... but taxi, autumn, tap, and football on the other (BrE)
No, but I do... by
TheShyIon
on 2015-08-01 05:24:00 UTC
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...use single quotes to denote quotes outside someone speaking, which is apparently British.
This is an 'example,' in case I didn't make myself clear. And that looks like it's not an example, but it is. I promise, guys.
But yeah, someone else just caught that in my writing. I have no clue how long I've been doing it for. It just looks better that way to my brain... >_
No, but I do... by
TheShyIon
on 2015-08-01 05:24:00 UTC
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...use single quotes to denote quotes outside someone speaking, which is apparently British.
This is an 'example,' in case I didn't make myself clear. And that looks like it's not an example, but it is. I promise, guys.
But yeah, someone else just caught that in my writing. I have no clue how long I've been doing it for. It just looks better that way to my brain... >_
Nope. American spelling only for me. by
World-Jumper
on 2015-08-01 02:35:00 UTC
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Then again, I am a rather bad speller in the first place., so, really, I don't use either one.
I'm the same with gray/grey. by
doctorlit
on 2015-08-01 01:40:00 UTC
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The first time I saw the word "grey" written out was on a crayon, which apparently used the British spelling. I learned the spelling based on that crayon, so now the "gray" form looks wrong to me.
Not really by
[EvilAI]UBEROverlord
on 2015-08-01 00:26:00 UTC
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I only use American Spellings with really the exception of grey. I use gray/grey interchangeably.
Oh, all the time. by
Iximaz
on 2015-08-01 00:16:00 UTC
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I actually have to check myself while writing missions because I have a really ingrained instinct to use the British spellings (thanks to growing up reading the original versions of Harry Potter).
But considering I plan on moving to England someday, it probably isn't a bad thing...
Hm... by
Desdendelle
on 2015-08-01 00:06:00 UTC
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I'm similarly inclined toward British spelling (in most cases) despite not being British.
Generally, though, this isn't something you need to announce; just note it when you offer your services as a beta or ask for one.