Ordet hittades på dessa språk:
Ingen översättning hittades i den valda målspråket.
Din sökning innehåller flera ord. För bättre resultat, prova att söka orden separat: Commonwealth, English
Liknande ord
Definitioner
Egentliga substantiv
- (uncommon) The generalised variety of English spoken and written primarily in the United Kingdom and its former colonies, sometimes excluding Canada.
- (rare) The group of varieties of English used in the ex-colonial member states of the Commonwealth of Nations, in distinction to the varieties used in Britain itself
Exempel
- The written form of the language universally taught in schools is Commonwealth English with a slight emphasis on a few words which might be more common in the specific areas than others.
- Amnesia (or amnaesia in Commonwealth English) is a condition in which memory is disturbed.
- There are also other reasons to account for differences between British English on the one hand and American and Commonwealth English on the other.
- 17: The three major forms of Modern English—British, American, and Commonwealth—are very nearly identical on the printed page, a great source of the linguistic unity and cultural solidarity of the Anglo-Saxon civilization.
- 25: Commonwealth English is very young in the prestige of its independent status.
- 164: For instance, the terms “United Kingdom spellings,” “English spellings,” and “Commonwealth spellings” are not synonymous, and many of the so-called American spellings will frequently be found as alternate choices in other countries.
- 169–70: Across the world, many former U.K. colonies use English as a major language, and their standard resembles the British standard more than the American. The term “Commonwealth English” is a general term used to refer to this variety of English, which in theory differs little from “British English” as used in Great Britain. ¶ Australia is the best-known example, but even in nations where English is not the official or most widely used language, Commonwealth English is extremely important in commerce and government—as is the case in Nigeria, Pakistan, and India, which is the second-most-populated country in the world.