Pitting Honeybadger

Seconded.

Baaah… it’s my impression that British and American spellings are pretty interchangeable on the SDMB and increasingly, in usage in general.

I never mind when someone uses a British spelling. We’re not all Americans. It’s cool.

I am amused when someone uses an American spelling and someone else “corrects” them. :laughing:

My duty is but to serve.

If it turns out to be to serve your sense of humour, so be it.

On this board it can be a grey area.

:grin:

* gray

*grauy?

DNA = Deoxyribonucleic Acid.
RNA = Ribonucleic Acid.

(Just getting ahead of the next Baaah.)

Ghrahey . . . but that’s just cheating at Scrabble.

Depends on how aesthetically pleasing or esthetically revolting one finds it. The science of archaeology is riddled with archeologists’ disputes on this point. it depends on how greige the items are.

ignore this

It’s funny because I’m American but I always prefer the spellings “grey” and “axe”. They just look correct to me and I don’t know why.

Aside from the unnecessary u in many words, I’m in agreement with you.

Wourds

I never tell people I come from the UK, they just ass me.

Well, then, if you’re actually interested in a subject, why wouldn’t you read about it? You could even take a class…

It feels like “Hey, I don’t know what this word means. I could look it up… naaaahhh, I’ll go out on the street and gather a dozen strangers into a group and ask them all at once, not listen to what they say, and then argue with them about it!”

.

eta: (“With any luck, they’ll still be trying to educate me long after I’ve stopped caring and walked away…”)

This statement needs a little love from those of us in British English speaking countries.

Although we would use “arse” even if it breaks the joke

Same here.

I’ve been living in the USA for 30+ years after growing up in a British English (mostly) using country and this is the first time I’m realizing that there are other ways to spell grey and axe!

I don’t even know which way I spell gre/a/y. I’m pretty sure it varies, and think it depends on the mood I’m in.

I think I usually spell axe with the e, but am not entirely sure of that either.

I doubt there’s any evolutionary advantage to using one over the other, in either case. Though there may be one in being able to use an axe; or even in being able to spell.