I didn't read back any further than that so didn't know you'd made any other posts. Sorry!
You forgot you'd quoted me earlier in thread??
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
I didn't read back any further than that so didn't know you'd made any other posts. Sorry!
I can't post just "Yup", so I'm expanding it to meet the technical rules of this forum engine. I remembered the post, not who had made it.
A random typo put an apostrophe between the "r" and the "s" in "yours," exactly where the marginally literate would put it? That sounds a little less than candid to me.Thank you for highlighting a typo, which I find very common here as the salt air corrodes the key contacts on most keyboards. Makes smooth typing impossible.
It's "yep", not "yup"
I think it all depends which Florida swamp you park your double-wide in. I hear they have different dialects down thereIt's "yep", not "yup".
yep - slang of yes (Merriam Webster online)
I think it all depends which Florida swamp you park your double-wide in. I hear they have different dialects down there
peterbj7:Do you have any idea why Americans persist in calling what they speak and write as English"
That is the answer, of course, to the American vs. English question. Americans speak and write a dialect of English. Just as Singaporeans, Canadians, and Australians do. Despite the protestations of the occasional pedantic Englishman trying to carve out a little niche of superiority, the dialects are largely the same, and we can all understand each other quite well. When a Mandarin speaker encounters a Cantonese speaker they have a great deal of difficulty communicating, which is why the two dialects have different names.I hear they have different dialects down there