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View Poll Results: Brought or Bought?
Brought is the past tense of 'to buy' isn't it?
9
36.00%
it's the way i talks innit
10
40.00%
it's apple's spellchecker doing it
1
4.00%
im dislecsik
5
20.00%
Voters: 25. You may not vote on this poll

BROUGHT or BOUGHT

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Old 13 August 2011, 05:55 PM
  #61  
StickyMicky
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Originally Posted by RobsyUK
Thank you for bringing a ***** to it

Its a didlo mate
Old 13 August 2011, 06:57 PM
  #62  
legb4rsk
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Originally Posted by boomer
I know exactly what you mean!

So many people say something like "I would off done it" when they really mean "I would of done it".

mb
"I would have done it."

Old 13 August 2011, 08:16 PM
  #63  
Mollymoo666
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Originally Posted by Leslie
"Brought" is an accepted English word, it has a definite meaning and is often used, usually in a correct manner; as is "Bought"

Les
Yes, they are, but they dont mean the same thing which is the point of this thread

Originally Posted by CREWJ
It effing annoys me too!

Some people need to learn how to spell. They're/There/Their, Where/We're/Were, Lose/Loose or Brought/Bought they all irritate me. At first I thought it was foreign speakers or children then I realized they're just thick.

I tend to ask them where they brought it from and they don't get it.
As we are all annoyed at the same thing we'll forgive your American spelling of realised
Old 13 August 2011, 08:23 PM
  #64  
gallois
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As you're in a forgiving mood, we'll forgive your lack of a comma and a full stop. (I treble checked that.)
Old 13 August 2011, 08:36 PM
  #65  
Mollymoo666
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Originally Posted by gallois
As you're in a forgiving mood, we'll forgive your lack of a comma and a full stop. (I treble checked that.)
Touche. I am sure we will also forgive your unnecessary parentheses.
Old 14 August 2011, 12:41 AM
  #66  
Bubba po
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Originally Posted by Mollymoo666
Yes, they are, but they dont mean the same thing which is the point of this thread
Ah, you've realised that Leslie often misses the point. It's his age, you know, coupled with his overwhelming urge to post something pointless, banal and inoffensive.

Which winds people like me up.
Old 14 August 2011, 01:06 AM
  #67  
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Originally Posted by Mollymoo666
As we are all annoyed at the same thing we'll forgive your American spelling of realised
I spell it with a zee too perfectly fine to do so according to the Oxford Dictionary

TX.
Old 14 August 2011, 07:50 AM
  #68  
Mollymoo666
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Originally Posted by Bubba po
Ah, you've realised that Leslie often misses the point. It's his age, you know, coupled with his overwhelming urge to post something pointless, banal and inoffensive.

Which winds people like me up.
Ah, that explains it then. I'll be sure to look out for his pointless posts in the future

Oxford Dictionary only accepts realized due to its proliferation in US derived software. Realised is still the only true UK spelling of the word.
Old 14 August 2011, 08:18 AM
  #69  
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Its a sad sign of today's "youf" - saying that, there are some shockingly illiterate older users on here too, obviously too busy rubbing one out to pay attention in English lessons.

Sad, very sad...
Old 14 August 2011, 08:38 AM
  #70  
JTaylor
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Originally Posted by DJ_Jon
Its a sad sign of today's "youf" - saying that, there are some shockingly illiterate older users on here too, obviously too busy rubbing one out to pay attention in English lessons.

Sad, very sad...
Yoof not Youf.
Old 14 August 2011, 10:32 AM
  #71  
David Lock
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Originally Posted by JTaylor
Yoof not Youf innit.

E.F.A.
Old 14 August 2011, 11:11 AM
  #72  
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*gets coat & leaves in shame....
Old 14 August 2011, 11:17 AM
  #73  
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Originally Posted by Mollymoo666
Oxford Dictionary only accepts realized due to its proliferation in US derived software. Realised is still the only true UK spelling of the word.
A common misconception, but nevertheless completely untrue. OED/OUP's preference of the 'ize' spelling (where permissible) predates the existence of computers and computerized dictionaries by centuries, and the actual reasons for that preference go back millenia.

As quoted in Wikipedia:
""[I]n mod.F. the suffix has become -iser, alike in words from Greek, as baptiser, évangéliser, organiser, and those formed after them from L., as civiliser, cicatriser, humaniser. Hence, some have used the spelling -ise in Eng., as in French, for all these words, and some prefer -ise in words formed in French or Eng. from L. elements, retaining -ize for those of Gr. composition. But the suffix itself, whatever the element to which it is added, is in its origin the Gr. -ιζειν, L. -izāre; and, as the pronunciation is also with z, there is no reason why in English the special French spelling should be followed, in opposition to that which is at once etymological and phonetic. In this Dictionary the termination is uniformly written -ize. (In the Gr. -ιζ-, the i was short, so originally in L., but the double consonant z (= dz, ts) made the syllable long; when the z became a simple consonant, (-idz) became īz, whence Eng. (-aɪz).)"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_spelling
http://oxforddictionaries.com/page/s...iseyse?view=uk


As someone who did a few years of Greek and also spent some time in Oxford, I'm not going to disguise where my allegiance lies on the issue
Old 14 August 2011, 11:29 AM
  #74  
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Originally Posted by Mollymoo666
Oxford Dictionary only accepts realized due to its proliferation in US derived software. Realised is still the only true UK spelling of the word.
In America you can only use "z" whereas in the UK you can use "s" or "z". It's perfectly acceptable to use either.

TX.
Old 14 August 2011, 11:30 AM
  #75  
Leslie
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Originally Posted by Mollymoo666
Yes, they are, but they dont mean the same thing which is the point of this thread



As we are all annoyed at the same thing we'll forgive your American spelling of realised
Gosh that is so good of you to point out that difference between those words out to me, I could have gone through life not knowing that!

Or do you think that maybe I realiSed that after all?

Les
Old 14 August 2011, 11:48 AM
  #76  
DARB
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Originally Posted by Leslie
Gosh that is so good of you to point out that difference between those words out to me, I could have gone through life not knowing that!

Or do you think that maybe I realiSed that after all?

Les

In mollymoos defence your original post just pointed out that both words existed, something that wasnt the issue


I myself after reading it thought "pointless"
Old 14 August 2011, 01:31 PM
  #77  
CREWJ
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The letter Z is cool, don't you know?
Old 14 August 2011, 02:43 PM
  #78  
boomer
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Originally Posted by Mollymoo666
I hope you are winking to show that you are being sarcastic and deliberately not using the correct 'I would have done it'?
Aye, 'twas a (sarky) winky

Originally Posted by legb4rsk
"I would have done it."

...but it is surprising how many members of this board don't know the correct usage

mb
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