I have just now noticed that I haven't been spelling things correctly. Sorry! I am American, but I speak to my Australian family and friends so much on Facebook. Today I posted about getting my hair dyed a "light brown colour" and some girl complained, because it is "color" in the United States. I have gotten so used to spelling things this way (favourite, mum, etc) and now I am just noticing. How did these spellings in the US form after the British spellings were already established? Why is this the only country to spell things this way? Does this make my spelling wrong?
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No it doesn't make you wrong, especially not here. This is an international forum so, both spellings are in fact correct.
I do it too as I have one close friend in Manchester (England) I talk with a lot so I'm used to the English spelling and, find myself adding U's and reversing the -er, as in liter vs litre and such. I do run a spell checker that uses American, so it minimized that actually getting posted, but I do use some of both spellings.
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It just means that girl is making a big deal out of nothing or does not know that, gasp, there are other countries - how about that?
Colour looks cooler than color anywho
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No it is not wrong.
Ignore the bovine scat , if she can read it and understand it , where is her problem?
She is acting like a spoiled-brat.
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The American academies pushed for spelling reforms that emphasized a simplification of English spelling during the 19th century. Some caught on, others didn't. Other sources of spelling difference are due to relative isolation, like the different names and spelling of car parts in the US.
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Color and colour are BOTH correct spellings and I think it's pretty rude to get all upset over which one is used.
My two cents~
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