Discussion:
British English------------American English
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Arumugham
2008-07-12 10:21:15 UTC
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British English------------American English

AUTUMN------------------- FALL
BAG -------------------------SACK
BARRISTOR ----------------LAWYER
BISCUIT --------------------COOKIE
CAR PARK------------------ PARKING LOT
CASHIER -------------------TELLER
CHEMIST'S SHOP ---------DRUG STORE
Arumugham
2008-07-12 10:25:19 UTC
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Post by Arumugham
British English------------American English
AUTUMN------------------- FALL
BAG -------------------------SACK
BARRISTOR ----------------LAWYER
BISCUIT --------------------COOKIE
CAR PARK------------------ PARKING LOT
CASHIER -------------------TELLER
CHEMIST'S SHOP ---------DRUG STORE
Visit to view a few differences.

http://learnspeakingenglish.blogspot.com
fronvee
Einde O'Callaghan
2008-07-13 08:01:11 UTC
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Post by Arumugham
British English------------American English
AUTUMN------------------- FALL
BAG -------------------------SACK
BARRISTOR ----------------LAWYER
A barrister is a particular type of lawyer (a word also used in
Britain), who specialises in arguing cases in court. I think Americans
would refer to this person as an attorney. Another type of lawyer in
England, Wales and Ireland (the terminology is different in Scotland) is
a solicitor - you'd go to him for legal advice or write a will.
Post by Arumugham
BISCUIT --------------------COOKIE
CAR PARK------------------ PARKING LOT
CASHIER -------------------TELLER
In a supermarket I think you call the person collecting the money at the
till a "check-out clerk". In Britain you could call this person a cashier.
Post by Arumugham
CHEMIST'S SHOP ---------DRUG STORE
The part of the drugstore (wrtiien as one word) where you geet your
prescription drugs is called the pharmacy.

Regards, Einde O'Callaghan
rwalker
2008-07-14 02:09:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by Arumugham
British English------------American English
AUTUMN------------------- FALL
BAG -------------------------SACK
BARRISTOR ----------------LAWYER
BISCUIT --------------------COOKIE
CAR PARK------------------ PARKING LOT
CASHIER -------------------TELLER
Bag and sack are both used in the U.S. There are regional variations.
Likewise, "cashier" is not at all uncommon in U.S. English.

R. Walker.
U.S. English.
Jim Heckman
2008-07-18 06:07:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by Einde O'Callaghan
Post by Arumugham
British English------------American English
AUTUMN------------------- FALL
Both "autumn" and "fall" are used in AmE.
Post by Einde O'Callaghan
Post by Arumugham
BAG -------------------------SACK
As are both "bag" and "sack", although one or the other might be
more common and/or have slightly different denotations in different
regions.
Post by Einde O'Callaghan
Post by Arumugham
BARRISTOR ----------------LAWYER
A barrister is a particular type of lawyer (a word also used in
Britain), who specialises in arguing cases in court. I think Americans
would refer to this person as an attorney.
"Lawyer" and "attorney" are largely synonymous in AmE, although the
latter is somewhat higher register and pretty much the only one
found in formal situations, and certainly in official titles. (For
example, no one would ever refer to *"the Lawyer General of the
United States" or *"the District Lawyer of Los Angeles County".) In
this sense, "lawyer" vs. "attorney" is very similar to "cop" vs.
"police officer".

In any case, there's certainly no nomenclatural distinction between
lawyers who specialize in arguing cases in front of a judge in
court and those who normally don't, unlike BrE "barrister" vs.
"solicitor".
Post by Einde O'Callaghan
Another type of lawyer in
England, Wales and Ireland (the terminology is different in Scotland) is
a solicitor - you'd go to him for legal advice or write a will.
Post by Arumugham
BISCUIT --------------------COOKIE
Note that "biscuit" is used in AmE, the distinction being, very
broadly, that cookies are sweet and biscuits aren't. (If anything,
biscuits are salty.)
Post by Einde O'Callaghan
Post by Arumugham
CAR PARK------------------ PARKING LOT
CASHIER -------------------TELLER
In a supermarket I think you call the person collecting the money at the
till a "check-out clerk". In Britain you could call this person a cashier.
Yes, but in AmE you can also call a supermarket check-out clerk a
"cashier", and only "cashier" is used for, say, the person you pay
in a restaurant (or to whom your waiter or waitress takes your
money or credit card, and from whom they bring back your change, if
applicable).

And of course, in AmE a "teller" is the person behind a bank
window, where you got cash from, or made deposits to, your account
in prehistoric times before Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) became
ubiquitous.

[...]
--
Jim Heckman
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