Aeroplane |
43.5% (134) | |
Airplane |
51.3% (158) | |
Something completely different. |
5.2% (16) |
Poll: Airplane or Aeroplane? Pages 1 2 3 NEXT | |
Depends on how fancy I want to be. Now pardon me, but no more buttered scones for me mater: I'm off to play the grand piano. | |
Three-dimensionally moving mass-transport locomotion machine. Oh yes, I'm so classy I wear monocles in the shower. | |
There are people on this earth who use "airplane"? Weirdos. | |
Wow, I seriously didn't know "aeroplane" was actually a thing. | |
It's 'Airplane!'
Then again, where I'm from, we don't go around adding unnecessary vowels to words. Such as 'Armor', 'Color' or 'Honor'. | |
Apparently the two people below you :P
I think you mean, 'Where I'm from, we subtract unnecessary vowels from words, such as Honour, Colour and armour' | |
Ha, this will end well. Now that I think about it, I write airplane but it sounds a bit like aeroplane when I say it though sometimes it sounds like airplane. AHHH! This isn't worth thinking about! EDIT It seems I should be writing it as aeroplane as I'm in the UK. | |
Actually, you americans were simply too lazy to spell them properly and took out the vowels. It represents your whole culture in a way. SCHWING!! | |
Aeroplane? Is that some sort of chocolate? | |
Oh shit, lol. I'm serious, though, I thought that was some archaic spelling. | |
I generally use airplane and the American versions of words in general. Although oddly enough, I pronounce the word "schedule" like "shedule".
At least we bother to prounounce "Veteran" & "Lieutenant" properly. :P | |
How do people pronounce veteran? I've always done vet-eh-ran I'll give you Lieutenant, though I still prefer saying left-tenant. | |
Aeroplane Aren't Americans the only ones that call it an airplane? For the rest of the english speaking world it's aeroplane. You should also ask which country they are from to find out. Being in Australia I have never heard anyone say call it an airplane, it's always aeroplane. | |
Here in America we use "airplane". Not sure about the rest of the world though. | |
I usually just say plane, or aeroplane I guess. Airplane sounds a bit strange. | |
I pronounce it Vet-er-an, but I heard the british (along with lost of people here in the states) pronounce it Vet-tran. | |
Aeroplane, mostly because it just sounds more... Colourful somehow. I also do say "Auto" whenever I can get away with it. C'mon, it sounds better, honest. Oh, and metric system über alles! It's just better. :3 | |
I like Aeroplane, though I pronounce it 'airplane' because I'm a classless hick who says 'y'all' on a regular basis :D | |
Airplane. I've always said it that way. The other just seems weird to me. | |
Any country that sees how the word 'aluminium' is spelt and still can't pronounce it correctly is obviously not to be trusted when it comes to matters such as this. And yes, outside the U.S, 'spelt' is used as the past-tense form of 'spell', as well as 'spelled'! | |
I spell and pronounce it as "aeroplane". It's funny because I'm American so I often get others telling me I'm saying or pronouncing it wrong. When I tell them that "airplane" isn't the proper spelling they don't believe me. It annoys me, really. | |
Wait, wait, I'm a Brit and I fail to see how 'veteran' can be mispronounced.
Ah, now, see, that's just laziness. Though I'm with you, insomuch that the British pronunciation of 'lieutenant' is just silly. I do know why the British pronounce it that way, but considering the etymology, I can't for the life of me fathom why they would persist in it. OT: Aeroplane... From a linguistic perspective, it makes more sense. But 'aircraft', being the catch-all term for flight capable vehicles, is a weird one... and presumably an American concoction, given the lack of distinct plural... -_- | |
Aeroplane, mostly because it sounds closer to "aeroplano" the Spanish word for it, but also because I do tend to use some UK spelling, it just sounds way more classy. | |
Suppose it depends on whether you are an American in the 21st century, or a British Sopwith Camel pilot in 1916... | |
To be honest, I'd prefer if Britain just called it Left-Tenant and spelt it like that to. | |
Nnnnn, maybe, except the lieutenant's typical place was at the back if the captain was about or at the front if the captain was dead/absent. And what you mentioned isn't really what 'lieutenant' means: 'in place of the holder' (Fr.) i.e. second-in-command. Direction isn't indicated... | |
Is this going to be like that buttwiping thread, where each side didn't even know there were people who did it the other way (despite it being about an even split)? Anyway, I say Airplane. | |
Ah fair enough, My naval knowledge isn't really so great. Still the whole right-hand-man, second-in-command thing. Either spelling works, just preference I guess. | |
depends who i am talking to Airplane, when i am talking with an american.
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I say "Airplane", but I really don't care how you spell/say it as long as we all understand that we're talking about the same damn thing; that thing being a large flying craft with wings that's used for mass transport. | |
Flygplan. | |
No sweat, and I guess it is just one of those things that has become so divergent that it is just what you like saying better. *shrug* So why not screw English altogether and say zhongwei... or something... Though I'm not sure what (military) service it comes from, except that the concept (it holds etymological roots in Latin) was first used by the Roman army... post-Marian, probably... but don't quote me on that... | |
Long or short "o" on your scone, fellow? Also, I do believe that it's "aeroplane", old chap. | |
...fixed-wing aircraft or just aircraft. There are too many definitions of the word plane, and I'd like that one removed. Probably stems from me being a former rotary aircraft tech, really. Also, the plural form of aircraft is aircraft. Just as the plural form of deer is deer. Context, it's a thing. | |
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Well escapists, which word do you use?
I swear this isn't procrastination for anything...