British English Question
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- kandscreeley
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British English Question
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- bookowlie
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I think it is normal. I am currently reading a review book by a British author and have read a few others in the past. I've noticed other things as well. For example - 1) the British don't use a comma before "but," they don't tend to use commas to separate phrases in sentences, etc. Once I know a book is written by a UK writer, I don't tend to notate those types of things as errors.kandscreeley wrote: ↑18 Dec 2018, 09:21 Is it normal in England to exclude prepositions in certain phrases? In a book I'm reading, I've noticed many examples of this happening, but this seems to be the only "error." So, I'm wondering if this is typical in that area of the world. An example would be: stay that side instead of stay on that side. Thanks for your help!
- kandscreeley
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There are some British spellings and punctuation that I'm used to. For example, I know that they use an apostrophe instead of quotation marks. This one I haven't really seen before. But, after what you said and the frequency it happens in the book, I'm thinking it's definitely NOT an error. Thanks!bookowlie wrote: ↑18 Dec 2018, 10:55I think it is normal. I am currently reading a review book by a British author and have read a few others in the past. I've noticed other things as well. For example - 1) the British don't use a comma before "but," they don't tend to use commas to separate phrases in sentences, etc. Once I know a book is written by a UK writer, I don't tend to notate those types of things as errors.kandscreeley wrote: ↑18 Dec 2018, 09:21 Is it normal in England to exclude prepositions in certain phrases? In a book I'm reading, I've noticed many examples of this happening, but this seems to be the only "error." So, I'm wondering if this is typical in that area of the world. An example would be: stay that side instead of stay on that side. Thanks for your help!
—Neil Gaiman
- bookowlie
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