dhermann1
I'll Lock Up
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- 9,154
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- Da Bronx, NY, USA
I just read a post from a UK member which mentioned her "flatmate". This made me wonder if the term "flat" and "apartment" are some day going to have a showdown over general usage, with one being consigned to history. My favorite example of this is the way the word "soda" has slowly eradicated "pop" in most of the US. "Flat" is still universally used in Britain (and Australia and NZ???), whereas "apartment" is universal here in the US.
Anyone else have any favorite pairs of words that are heading for a similar showdown?
Here in the US several good British phrases have come into general use in the last couple of decades, for example "gone missing". Anybody else watch the evolution of our common tongue this closely?
Anyone else have any favorite pairs of words that are heading for a similar showdown?
Here in the US several good British phrases have come into general use in the last couple of decades, for example "gone missing". Anybody else watch the evolution of our common tongue this closely?