Two other countries separated by a common language

Benjamin Barrett gogaku at IX.NETCOM.COM
Sat Sep 29 23:41:42 UTC 2007


That reminds of a similar problem I had with a South African. He was
advertising for a job and said he'd rather not pay for someone to fly
there. Evidently he got a number of responses from the US, including me,
as Americans interpret that to mean that he might pay for travel there. BB

Wilson Gray wrote:
>
> Something like that. The question,
>
> "Can you use one of these?" ["Would you like to have one of these?"] in American
>
> was re-interpreted as:
>
> "Do you have the ability to use of one of these?" in Australian.
>
> -Wilson
>
> On 9/29/07, Benjamin Barrett <gogaku at ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>
>> ---------------------- Information from the mail header -----------------------
>> Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
>> Poster:       Benjamin Barrett <gogaku at IX.NETCOM.COM>
>> Subject:      Re: Two other countries separated by a common language
>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> I have heard that in England questions such as "Do you know where the
>> subway station is?" are considered yes/no. Is this the same issue? BB
>>
>> Wilson Gray wrote:
>>
>>> An American has a handful of wallet-sized, plastic calendars given
>>> away as a form of advertising by his bank.
>>>
>>> The American, proffering a calendar to an Australian friend, speaks:
>>>
>>> "Can you use one of these?"
>>>
>>> The Australian, after pondering the American's question and briefly
>>> examining the calendar, returns it and, answering the question with a
>>> question, replies:
>>>
>>> "You just look at it, don't you?"
>>>

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