British English
British English (or BrEn, BrE, BE, en-UK or en-GB) is the broad term used to distinguish the forms of the English language used in the United Kingdom from forms used elsewhere. The Oxford English Dictionary applies the term to English "as spoken or written in the British Isles; esp the forms of English usual in Great Britain", reserving "Hiberno-English" for the "English language as spoken and written in Ireland". Nevertheless, Hiberno-English forms part of the broad British English continuum. Others, such as the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary, define it as the "English language as it spoken and written in England."
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Some articles on british english:
... Clive Upton is professor of English language at the University of Leeds, England, specializing in dialectology and sociolinguistics ... He has acted as a consultant on British pronunciation for the English-language dictionaries published by Oxford University Press, including the Oxford English ... He was also responsible for the British element of the Oxford Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English (2001) ...
... As with English around the world, the English language as used in the United Kingdom is governed by convention rather than formal code there is no equivalent body to the Académie française or the Real ... from other languages and other strains of English, and neologisms are frequent ... the form of language spoken in London and the East Midlands became standard English within the Court, and ultimately became the basis for generally accepted use in the law, government, literature and ...
... In English-speaking society, the most universally accepted forms of address to another person, known or unknown, and regardless of station, are "Sir" (to men) and "Madam", sometimes shortened to "Ma ... Bloke (Man, British and Australian English) Blood or Blud derived from variants blood clot and bludclot, Jamaican slang for a sanitary towel Boo, (urban slang) significant other ... Buddy or Bud ("Buddy" is especially common in Newfoundland English) B'y Newfoundland pronunciation of "Boy", used as a general form of address primarily to a male but now increasingly to ...
... even more sensual phallus) and tail-end trunk, in American English, particularly when describing large buttocks "junk in the trunk" apple, referring to the similar shape of the fruit, derived from the 1970s ... trouserless butt bum – in British English, used frequently in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and many other English speaking Commonwealth ... Butte, a geographical mound, known since 1805 in American English, from (Old) French butte "mound, knoll") and orbs – shape-metaphors ...
... Men Show is dubbed from American English, Canadian English, British English, Australian English and New Zealand English ... Rude, the American English, Canadian English, British English and Australian English cast of voices is completely different from the New Zealand English cast ... finished episodes are then shipped to the New Zealand English for overdubbing, where the New Zealand English cast mimics the US, AUS, CAN and UK cast, matching the existing lip movements ...
Famous quotes containing the words english and/or british:
“The English public, as a mass, takes no interest in a work of art until it is told that the work in question is immoral.”
—Oscar Wilde (18541900)
“In New Yorkwhose subway trains in particular have been tattooed with a brio and an energy to put our own rude practitioners to shamenot an inch of free space is spared except that of advertisements.... Even the most chronically dispossessed appear prepared to endorse the legitimacy of the haves.”
—Gilbert Adair, British author, critic. Cleaning and Cleansing, Myths and Memories (1986)