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British or American English?
Speakers of British and American English display some striking differences
in their use of grammar. In this detailed survey, John Algeo considers ques-
tions such as:
∗
Who lives on a street, and who lives in a street?
∗
Who takes a bath, and who has a bath?
∗
Who says Neither do I, and who says Nor do I?
∗
After “thank you”, who says Not at all and who says You’re welcome?
∗
Whose team are on the ball, and whose team is?
Containing extensive quotations from real-life English on both sides of the
Atlantic, collected over the past twenty years, this is a clear and highly
organized guide to the differences – and the similarities – in the grammar of
British and American speakers. Written for those with no prior knowledge
of linguistics, it shows how these grammatical differences are linked mainly
to particular words, and provides an accessible account of contemporary
English as it is actually used.
is Professor Emeritus in the Department of English, Uni-
versity of Georgia, Athens. His previous posts include Fulbright Senior
Research Scholar, University College London (1986–7), Guggenheim
Fellow (1986–7), and University of Georgia Alumni Foundation Distin-
guished Professor (1988–94). Over the past forty years he has contributed
papers to a wide variety of books and journals, including 91 book reviews.
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The aim of this series is to provide a framework for original studies of English, both
present-day and past. All books are based securely on empirical research, and represent
theoretical and descriptive contributions to our knowledge of national varieties of
English, both written and spoken. The series covers a broad range of topics and
approaches, including syntax, phonology, grammar, vocabulary, discourse, pragmatics
and sociolinguistics, and is aimed at an international readership.
General editor
Merja Kytö (Uppsala University)
Editorial Board
Bas Aarts (University College London), John Algeo (University of Georgia), Susan
Fitzmaurice (Northern Arizona University), Richard Hogg (University of Manchester),
Charles F. Meyer (University of Massachusetts)
Already published in this series:
Christian Mair
Infinitival Complement Clauses in English: a Study of Syntax in Discourse
Charles F. Meyer
Apposition in Contemporary English
Jan Firbas
Functional Sentence Perspective in Written and Spoken Communication
Izchak M. Schlesinger
Cognitive Space and Linguistic Case
Katie Wales
Personal Pronouns in Present-day English
Laura Wright
The Development of Standard English, 1300–1800: Theories, Descriptions, Conflicts
Charles F. Meyer
English Corpus Linguistics: Theory and Practice
Stephen J. Nagle and Sara L. Sanders (eds.)
English in the Southern United States
Anne Curzan
Gender Shifts in the History of English
Kingsley Bolton
Chinese Englishes
Irma Taavitsainen and Päivi Pahta (eds.)
Medical and Scientific Writing in Late Medieval English
Elizabeth Gordon, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury
and Peter Trudgill
New Zealand English: Its Origins and Evolution
Raymond Hickey (ed.)
Legacies of Colonial English
Merja Kytö, Mats Rydén and Erik Smitterberg (eds.)
Nineteenth Century English: Stability and Change
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British or American
English?
A Handbook of Word and
Grammar Patterns
J O H N A LG E O
University of Georgia
www.CambridgeOxford.com
Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo
Cambridge University Press
The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge , UK
Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York
www.cambridge.org
Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521371377
© John Algeo 2006
This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provision of
relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place
without the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
First published in print format 2006
- ---- eBook (EBL)
- --- eBook (EBL)
- ---- hardback
- --- hardback
- ---- paperback
- --- paperback
Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of s
for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication, and does not
guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.
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Contents
Preface page xi
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction 1
British and American as national varieties 1
Differences between British and American 2
The basis of this study 2
Sources of comparative statistics and citations 4
Conventions and organization of this study 6
Part I Parts of Speech 9
1 Verbs 11
1.1 Derivation 11
1.2 Form 12
1.3 Verb phrases 24
1.4 Functions 31
2 Determiners 43
2.1 Definite article 43
2.2 Indefinite article 49
2.3 Possessive construction 52
2.4 No determiner versus some determiner 53
2.5 Predeterminers and postdeterminers 64
3 Nouns 69
3.1 Derivation 69
3.2 Form 76
3.3 Function 86
3.4 Names and titles 102
3.5 Genitive constructions 104
vii
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viii Contents
4 Pronouns 107
4.1 Personal 107
4.2 Impersonal 110
4.3 Demonstrative 111
4.4 Relative 112
4.5 Interrogative 114
4.6 Indefinite 114
4.7 Expletive 115
4.8 Case 116
5 Adjectives 119
5.1 Derivation 119
5.2 Frequency and collocation 126
5.3 Comparison 128
5.4 Adjective order 131
6 Adverbs 133
6.1 General 133
6.2 Disjuncts 146
6.3 Comparison 148
6.4 Adverb order 148
6.5 Adverbial particles 151
7 Qualifiers 153
7.1 Modifying adjectives or adverbs 153
7.2 Modifying prepositional phrases 157
7.3 Modifying comparative structures 158
8 Prepositions 159
8.1 Choice of preposition 159
8.2 Omission of any preposition 194
8.3 Omission of the prepositional object 197
8.4 Prepositional phrase versus noun adjunct 197
8.5 Order of numbers with by 197
9 Conjunctions 199
9.1 Coordinating conjunctions 199
9.2 Subordinating conjunctions 201
10 Interjections 207
Part II Syntactic Constructions 215
11 Complementation 217
11.1 Complementation of verbs 217
11.2 Complementation of nouns 251
11.3 Complementation of adjectives 257
11.4 Complementation of adverbs 261
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Contents ix
12 Mandative constructions 263
12.1 Mandative present indicative 264
12.2 Mandative past indicative 266
13 Expanded predicates 269
13.1 Five “light” verbs in British and American 270
13.2 Modification and complementation of the
expanded predicate noun 276
13.3 Other expanded-predicate-like constructions 277
14 Concord 279
14.1 Verb and pronoun concord with collective nouns 279
14.2 Verb concord in other problematical cases 285
15 Propredicates 287
15.1 Propredicate do 287
15.2 Complements of propredicates 292
16 Tag questions 293
16.1 Canonical form 293
16.2 Anomalous forms 293
16.3 Frequency of use 296
16.4 Rhetorical uses 297
16.5 Other forms and uses 302
17 Miscellaneous 305
17.1 Focus 305
17.2 Phatic language 308
17.3 Numbers 310
17.4 Dates 311
Bibliography of British book citation sources 313
Bibliography of studies, dictionaries, and corpora 319
Index of words 325
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Preface
The study on which this book is based began about forty years ago as a casual
interest in the subject engendered by Thomas Pyles’s history textbook, The
Origins and Development of the English Language (now in its fifth revised edition,
Algeo and Pyles 2004). It was focused during a year (1986–7) the author spent
in the Survey of English Usage at University College London as a Fulbright
Senior Research Scholar and a Guggenheim Fellow. In those days, the Survey
was only beginning to be converted into electronic form, so at first research
involved hunting through paper slips and copying information by hand. Later,
as the Survey was computerized, electronic searches became possible, initially
only at the Survey office and later through a CD anywhere.
The present study later benefited from the collection of citations made by
Allen Walker Read for a historical dictionary of British lexical items. My wife,
Adele, and I then set out to supplement Read’s files with citations we collected
from more recent material than he had used, including citations for grammatical
as well as lexical matters. Our own corpus of British citations is now about three
million words in size. That is not large for a contemporary data file, but it consists
entirely of citations that we had reason to suspect exemplified British use.
Work on this book was delayed by a variety of other duties to which its author
had fallen heir. It is now presented, with painful awareness of its limitations,
but, as the French are fond of saying, faute de mieux. Undoubtedly, British and
American English are grammatically different in ways not reported here. And
some of the grammatical differences reported here may be less certain than
this book suggests because of difficulties in identifying and substantiating those
differences or because of the misapprehension of the author. Nevertheless, I hope
that it will be helpful in pinpointing various areas of structural difference between
the two major national varieties of the language.
xi
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Acknowledgments
The debts owed for help in producing this book are more than the author can
pay. The greatest debt for a labor of love is to his wife, Adele Silbereisen Algeo,
who has assisted him in this, as in all other activities during the nearly fifty years
of their married life. In particular, she has been the major collector of British
citations that compose the corpus from which most of the illustrative quotations
have been taken. She has also critiqued and proofed the text of the book at every
stage of its production.
Gratitude is also due to a succession of editors at the Cambridge University
Press who have, with kind hearts and gentle words, tolerated a succession of delays
in the book’s preparation. Likewise gratitude is due to the Cambridge University
Press for permission to use the Cambridge International Corpus, without which
statements of relative frequency in British and American use would be far more
intuitional and far less data-based than they are.
I am indebted to a variety of scholarly studies, both general and specific, for
their insights into British-American differences. These are cited in the text of this
book and listed in the bibliography of scholarly works at the end. I am particularly
indebted to the works by Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech,
and Jan Svartvik (1985), Michael Swan (1995), and Pam Peters (2004). For
existing scholarship that has not been cited here, I can only say “mea culpa, mea
culpa, mea maxima culpa.”
Individuals who, over the years, have kindly sent Adele and me quotations that
have been entered into our corpus include notably Catherine M. Algeo, Thomas
Algeo, L. R. N. Ashley, Carmen Acevedo Butcher, Ronald Butters, Tom Creswell,
Charles Clay Doyle, Virginia McDavid, Michael Montgomery, and Susan Wright
Sigalas.
Finally, and in a sense initially, I am grateful for the support of the John Simon
Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the Fulbright Senior Research Scholar
Program for support at the Survey of English Usage, University of London,
during the academic year 1986–7, when the project was begun, and to the now
departed Sidney Greenbaum, who as Quain Professor of English Language and
Literature invited me to the Survey.
xii
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Introduction
British and American as national varieties
There are many varieties of English other than British (here the English of
the United Kingdom) and American (here the English of the United States).
All of those other varieties are intrinsically just as worthy of study and use
as British and American. But these two varieties are the ones spoken by
most native speakers of English and studied by most foreign learners. They
have a special status as the two principal national varieties of the language
simply because there is more material available in them than in any other
variety.
British is the form of English now used in the country whence all other
forms of English have ultimately derived. But present-day British is not the
origin of any other variety of the language; rather it and all the other varieties
are equally descendant from a form of English spoken in the British Isles in
earlier times. In some respects, present-day British is closer to the common
ancestral form of the present-day varieties than is American or other vari-
eties; but in other respects the reverse is true, and American, for instance, pre-
serves older uses that became obsolete in British use. To mistake present-day
British for the ancestor of all other forms of English is a logical and factual
error.
The focus of this study is on how contemporary British English differs
from American. That is, in comparing two varieties of a language, it is con-
venient to take one as the basis for comparison and to describe the other
by contrast with it. This study takes American as its basis and describes
British in relation to that basis. The reason for this approach is that American
has more native speakers than British and is rapidly becoming the dominant
form of English in non-native countries other perhaps than those of Western
Europe. Much European established academic bias favors British as a model;
but evolving popular culture is biased toward American. This widespread dis-
semination of the American variety makes it a reasonable basis for describing
British.
1
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2 Introduction
Differences between British and American
The most obvious difference between British and American is in the “tune” of
the language, that is, the intonation that accompanies sentences. When a Briton
or an American talks, they identify themselves primarily by the tunes of their
respective varieties. In singing, the prose tune is overridden by the musical tune,
making it much harder to distinguish British and American singers.
Other pronunciation differences exist in stress patterns and in consonant and
vowel articulation and distribution. Those differences have been described in
fine detail. Vocabulary differences have been very widely noted between the two
varieties, and they are fairly extensive, although also often subtler than most lists
of supposed equivalences account for. Popular awareness probably centers more
on lexical differences than on any other sort, partly perhaps because they are the
easiest for the layperson to notice. Subtle differences of national style also exist,
but have been but little and only incidentally noted (Algeo 1989, Heacock and
Cassidy 1998).
Grammatical differences have been treated, but mainly by individual scholarly
studies focused on particular grammatical matters. Extensive and comprehen-
sive treatment is rare. Popular writers on grammar are aware that British and
American differ in their morphosyntax but tend to be sketchy about the details.
Anthony Burgess (1992), who is one of the linguistically best informed men of
letters, settled on a few verb forms as illustrations. The grammatical differences
between the two principal national varieties of the language are, however, man-
ifold. Some general treatments of British-American grammatical differences,
from various standpoints, are those by Randolph Quirk et al. (1985), John Algeo
(1988), Michael Swan (1995), Douglas Biber et al. (1999), Rodney Huddleston
and Geoffrey Pullum (2002), Gunnel Tottie (2002, 146–78), Peter Trudgill and
Jean Hannah (2002), and Pam Peters (2004).
Although many, few of the grammatical differences between British and Amer-
ican are great enough to produce confusion, and most are not stable because the
two varieties are constantly influencing each other, with borrowing both ways
across the Atlantic and nowadays via the Internet. When a use is said to be
British, that statement does not necessarily mean that it is the only or even the
main British use or that the use does not occur in American also, but only that the
use is attested in British sources and is more typical of British than of American
English.
The basis of this study
A distinction is often drawn between intuition and data as the basis for state-
ments about language. That dichotomy, like most others, is false. Intuition is
needed to identify matters to comment on, and data is (or, as the reader prefers,
are) needed to substantiate intuition. My wife and I have spent twenty years
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Introduction 3
gathering citations of what intuition told us were British uses. Then I set out
to substantiate those intuitions by consulting corpora of data. In most cases,
our intuitions proved correct, and the corpora yielded statistics to support
our hunches. In some cases, however, what intuition told us was a Briticism
turned out to be nothing of the sort, but instead just to be a rare or pecu-
liar use – rare and peculiar in both British and American English. And in a
few cases, we were spectacularly wrong. Linguistic intuition is invaluable but
unreliable.
Corpus data is likewise invaluable, but it has its own unreliability. The statis-
tics from any corpus should be used with care and reservations, especially in
comparing statistics from different corpora or even statistics derived from the
same corpus but in different ways. A bit of folk wisdom has it that there are three
kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics. The problems with statistics based
on language corpora include the fact that two corpora may not be comparable
because they are of different sizes or because they are composed of different kinds
of texts. Academic printed texts and conversational oral texts will have strikingly
different characteristics.
The way one phrases a search in a corpus can also produce different results; for
example, if the search engine is sensitive to capitalization, asking for examples and
statistics of a form with a lower-case initial letter may produce rather different
results than a query asking for the same information of the same form, but with an
upper-case initial letter. In this study, capitalization was taken into consideration
when it seemed potentially influential, but not otherwise.
Moreover, many grammatical items are difficult to find in a corpus unless it
has been extensively and accurately tagged, and few corpora, especially the larger
ones, have the sort of tagging that would make grammatical searches easy. Instead,
one must come up with ways of asking the corpus about instances of something
that its search engine can find and that will give at least implicit, albeit incomplete,
information about grammatical structures. Thus if one wants information about
the form of negation in sentences with indefinite direct objects (They had no
money) versus those with definite direct objects (They didn’t have the money
needed), barring sophisticated grammatical tagging, it is necessary to ask about
particular constructions (such as those just cited) and extrapolate a generalization
from them. This study generally eschews such broad extrapolation, but some was
unavoidable.
Finally, however, one relies on whatever is available. For the entries in this
study, such evidence as was convenient to extract from corpora has been cited. But
when that evidence was not readily available, intuition was still used. Any entry
with no substantiating evidence is an intuitional guess, as far as its Britishness is
concerned. In those, as well as other, cases it is advisable to keep in mind the wise
words of Oliver Cromwell to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland:
“I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be mistaken.”
The author intones those words as a mantra.
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4 Introduction
Sources of comparative statistics and citations
Statistics
In the body of this work, several corpora have been used and are cited by name,
but the one most used, especially for comparative statistics, is the Cambridge
International Corpus (CIC). Statistics from it are sometimes cited as ratios or
percentages; in those cases, the base number is of a size to make such form of
citation appropriate and easy to follow. CIC statistics are also sometimes cited
by an arcane abbreviation: “iptmw,” that is, “instances per ten million words,”
which is the way the CIC reports frequencies from its nearly two hundred million
words. The accompanying table shows the composition of this great corpus and
the relative sizes of its component parts. As can be seen, the British corpus totals
101.9 million words, of which 83 percent are written texts and 17 percent spoken
texts; the American corpus totals 96.1 million words, of which 77 percent are
written texts and 23 percent spoken texts.
CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL CORPUS
corpus million number
group corpus name words of cites contents
British BRNEWS25 25.0 60224 mixed newspapers 1988 – June 2000
written BRWRIT2 25.4 26915 fiction, nonfiction & magazines etc.
BNCWRIT1 25.1 901 British National Corpus part 1 (1979–1994)
ACAD BR 9.2 1260 British academic journals & nonfiction
84.7
British BRSPOK2 7.1 1652 spoken (lexicography) incl. Cancode/Brtrans
spoken BNCSPOK 10.1 911 British National Corpus spoken (1980–1994)
17.2
American AMNEWS25 25.0 45026 mixed newspapers 1979–1998
written AMNW01 2 22.0 23042 newspapers 2001
AMWRIT2 23.8 28453 fiction, nonfiction & magazines etc.
ACAD AM 3.6 41 American academic journals & nonfiction
74.4
American AMLEXI 6.2 764 spoken (lexicography) incl. Naec/Amspok
spoken AMSPPROF 1.9 17 spoken professional (lexicography)
AMTV 13.6 60881 TV & radio (lexicography & research)
21.7
In consulting the CIC, all textual categories were weighted equally, even
though only 17 percent of British texts and 23 percent of American texts are
spoken versus written, and 11 percent of British written texts and 5 percent
of American written texts are academic versus general. That equal weighting
emphasizes disproportionately the fewer spoken over written texts and academic
over general writing. Different weightings would very likely have produced at
least somewhat different results.
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Introduction 5
Because the focus of this study is not on speech versus writing or academic
versus general style, and because British and American are treated alike in this
respect, ignoring the differences in text types probably does not greatly affect the
general conclusions concerning British versus American use. Thus a statement
such as “daren’t is 13.9 times more frequent in British than in American” refers
to a combination of spoken and written texts in both varieties, although it is in the
nature of things that contractions are more frequent in speech than in writing.
That, however, is not the concern of this study.
The CIC is especially useful for a statistical comparison of British and Amer-
ican because of its large size and because it has roughly comparable samples of
British and American texts. As mentioned above, statistics from it are often cited
in terms of “instances per ten million words” (iptmw). When some form or con-
struction is cited as occurring X times more or less often in one variety than in
the other, or in percentages, the basis for that comparison seemed adequate, and
that style of comparison easier to understand.
Citations
In keeping with the focus on British English mentioned above, all of the illustra-
tive citations are of British use. Most of them are drawn from a corpus of British
examples compiled by Adele and John Algeo over a period of some twenty years.
That corpus consists of British citations gathered because they were suspected
to contain characteristically British features, chiefly lexical but also some gram-
matical ones. Most of the citations are from newspapers or popular fiction. The
corpus is stored electronically in word-processor format.
Illustrative quotations are generally limited to one for each entry. In many
cases the files that underlie this study contain a great many more, but space was
not available for them. Several of the chapters depend heavily on prior studies by
the author and draw both examples and exposition from articles reporting those
studies.
The sources cited are heavily in the genre of mystery novels and other light
fiction, chosen because the initial reading was for lexical purposes, and those
genres have a rich store of colloquialisms and informal language (in which British-
American differences are most pronounced) whereas serious fiction contains
fewer such items.
British fiction that has been adapted for American readers provides a useful
source to document the words and expressions that publishers change for the
American market. In the case of the Harry Potter books, a website (www.hp-
lexicon.org/) provides a list of such changes. Quotations from these books in this
work note the American adaptation when it was recorded on that site.
Many of the quotations cited here were computerized by graduate assistants
at the University of Georgia. They sometimes made mistakes in transcribing a
quotation that suggest the quotation’s use was at variance with their own native
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6 Introduction
use; such mistakes are occasionally noted as evidence for the Britishness of a
particular form.
Examples cited from publicly available corpora are identified appropriately.
Those cited from the Survey of English Usage (SEU) have corpus identification
numbers preceded by either “s” for spoken or “w” for written.
Conventions and organization of this study
Illustrative quotations are abridged when that can be done without distortion or
losing needed context. Matter omitted in the middle of a quotation is indicated
by ellipsis points; matter omitted at the beginning of a quotation is indicated
only if the retained matter does not begin with a capital letter; matter omitted at
the end of a quotation is not indicated.
In the illustrative quotations, periodical headlines have arbitrarily been printed
with initial capital letters for each word, as a device to facilitate their recognition.
The abbreviation “iptmw,” which is widely used, has been explained above as
meaning “instances per ten million words” in the CIC texts. An asterisk before a
construction (as in *go sane) means that the construction is impossible in normal
use. A question mark before a construction (as in ?They dared their friends solve
the puzzle) means that the construction is of doubtful or disputed possibility in
normal use. Cross-references from one chapter to another use the symbol §; thus
§ 2.2.2.3 means “chapter 2 section 2.2.3”. Abbreviations of titles of dictionaries,
grammars, and corpora are explained in the bibliographies of scholarly works
and of citation sources.
Studies and dictionaries are cited either by title abbreviations (e.g., CGEL),
which are identified in the bibliography, or by author and year (e.g., Peters 2004).
Citation sources are cited by date and author (e.g., 1977 Dexter) and short title,
if necessary (e.g., 1937 Innes, Hamlet) or by periodical date and title (e.g., 2003
June 12 Times 20/2; for location in a periodical, “2 4/2–3” means “section 2,
page 4, columns 2 to 3”).
In headwords and glosses to them, general terms representing contextual ele-
ments are italicized, e.g., pressurize someone means that the verb pressurize
takes a personal object.
A comment that a construction is “rare” means that the Algeo corpus contains
few examples, often only one, and that CIC has no or very few instances of
it. Such constructions are included because they illustrate a pattern. The term
“common-core English” designates usage common to the two varieties, British
and American, and not differing significantly between them.
Of the seventeen following chapters, the first ten deal with parts of speech,
and the final seven with matters of syntax or phrase and clause constructions.
Because the verb is central to English grammatical constructions, it is considered
in Chapter 1. Thereafter, the elements of the noun phrase are taken up: deter-
miners, nouns, pronouns, and adjectives. Adverbs and qualifiers (i.e., adverbs
of degree) follow, succeeded by prepositions and conjunctions, with the highly
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British or American English?
Speakers of British and American English display some striking differences
in their use of grammar. In this detailed survey, John Algeo considers ques-
tions such as:
∗
Who lives on a street, and who lives in a street?
∗
Who takes a bath, and who has a bath?
∗
Who says Neither do I, and who says Nor do I?
∗
After “thank you”, who says Not at all and who says You’re welcome?
∗
Whose team are on the ball, and whose team is?
Containing extensive quotations from real-life English on both sides of the
Atlantic, collected over the past twenty years, this is a clear and highly
organized guide to the differences – and the similarities – in the grammar of
British and American speakers. Written for those with no prior knowledge
of linguistics, it shows how these grammatical differences are linked mainly
to particular words, and provides an accessible account of contemporary
English as it is actually used.
is Professor Emeritus in the Department of English, Uni-
versity of Georgia, Athens. His previous posts include Fulbright Senior
Research Scholar, University College London (1986–7), Guggenheim
Fellow (1986–7), and University of Georgia Alumni Foundation Distin-
guished Professor (1988–94). Over the past forty years he has contributed
papers to a wide variety of books and journals, including 91 book reviews.
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The aim of this series is to provide a framework for original studies of English, both
present-day and past. All books are based securely on empirical research, and represent
theoretical and descriptive contributions to our knowledge of national varieties of
English, both written and spoken. The series covers a broad range of topics and
approaches, including syntax, phonology, grammar, vocabulary, discourse, pragmatics
and sociolinguistics, and is aimed at an international readership.
General editor
Merja Kytö (Uppsala University)
Editorial Board
Bas Aarts (University College London), John Algeo (University of Georgia), Susan
Fitzmaurice (Northern Arizona University), Richard Hogg (University of Manchester),
Charles F. Meyer (University of Massachusetts)
Already published in this series:
Christian Mair
Infinitival Complement Clauses in English: a Study of Syntax in Discourse
Charles F. Meyer
Apposition in Contemporary English
Jan Firbas
Functional Sentence Perspective in Written and Spoken Communication
Izchak M. Schlesinger
Cognitive Space and Linguistic Case
Katie Wales
Personal Pronouns in Present-day English
Laura Wright
The Development of Standard English, 1300–1800: Theories, Descriptions, Conflicts
Charles F. Meyer
English Corpus Linguistics: Theory and Practice
Stephen J. Nagle and Sara L. Sanders (eds.)
English in the Southern United States
Anne Curzan
Gender Shifts in the History of English
Kingsley Bolton
Chinese Englishes
Irma Taavitsainen and Päivi Pahta (eds.)
Medical and Scientific Writing in Late Medieval English
Elizabeth Gordon, Lyle Campbell, Jennifer Hay, Margaret Maclagan, Andrea Sudbury
and Peter Trudgill
New Zealand English: Its Origins and Evolution
Raymond Hickey (ed.)
Legacies of Colonial English
Merja Kytö, Mats Rydén and Erik Smitterberg (eds.)
Nineteenth Century English: Stability and Change
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British or American
English?
A Handbook of Word and
Grammar Patterns
J O H N A LG E O
University of Georgia
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Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo
Cambridge University Press
The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge , UK
Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York
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© John Algeo 2006
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Contents
Preface page xi
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction 1
British and American as national varieties 1
Differences between British and American 2
The basis of this study 2
Sources of comparative statistics and citations 4
Conventions and organization of this study 6
Part I Parts of Speech 9
1 Verbs 11
1.1 Derivation 11
1.2 Form 12
1.3 Verb phrases 24
1.4 Functions 31
2 Determiners 43
2.1 Definite article 43
2.2 Indefinite article 49
2.3 Possessive construction 52
2.4 No determiner versus some determiner 53
2.5 Predeterminers and postdeterminers 64
3 Nouns 69
3.1 Derivation 69
3.2 Form 76
3.3 Function 86
3.4 Names and titles 102
3.5 Genitive constructions 104
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viii Contents
4 Pronouns 107
4.1 Personal 107
4.2 Impersonal 110
4.3 Demonstrative 111
4.4 Relative 112
4.5 Interrogative 114
4.6 Indefinite 114
4.7 Expletive 115
4.8 Case 116
5 Adjectives 119
5.1 Derivation 119
5.2 Frequency and collocation 126
5.3 Comparison 128
5.4 Adjective order 131
6 Adverbs 133
6.1 General 133
6.2 Disjuncts 146
6.3 Comparison 148
6.4 Adverb order 148
6.5 Adverbial particles 151
7 Qualifiers 153
7.1 Modifying adjectives or adverbs 153
7.2 Modifying prepositional phrases 157
7.3 Modifying comparative structures 158
8 Prepositions 159
8.1 Choice of preposition 159
8.2 Omission of any preposition 194
8.3 Omission of the prepositional object 197
8.4 Prepositional phrase versus noun adjunct 197
8.5 Order of numbers with by 197
9 Conjunctions 199
9.1 Coordinating conjunctions 199
9.2 Subordinating conjunctions 201
10 Interjections 207
Part II Syntactic Constructions 215
11 Complementation 217
11.1 Complementation of verbs 217
11.2 Complementation of nouns 251
11.3 Complementation of adjectives 257
11.4 Complementation of adverbs 261
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Contents ix
12 Mandative constructions 263
12.1 Mandative present indicative 264
12.2 Mandative past indicative 266
13 Expanded predicates 269
13.1 Five “light” verbs in British and American 270
13.2 Modification and complementation of the
expanded predicate noun 276
13.3 Other expanded-predicate-like constructions 277
14 Concord 279
14.1 Verb and pronoun concord with collective nouns 279
14.2 Verb concord in other problematical cases 285
15 Propredicates 287
15.1 Propredicate do 287
15.2 Complements of propredicates 292
16 Tag questions 293
16.1 Canonical form 293
16.2 Anomalous forms 293
16.3 Frequency of use 296
16.4 Rhetorical uses 297
16.5 Other forms and uses 302
17 Miscellaneous 305
17.1 Focus 305
17.2 Phatic language 308
17.3 Numbers 310
17.4 Dates 311
Bibliography of British book citation sources 313
Bibliography of studies, dictionaries, and corpora 319
Index of words 325
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Preface
The study on which this book is based began about forty years ago as a casual
interest in the subject engendered by Thomas Pyles’s history textbook, The
Origins and Development of the English Language (now in its fifth revised edition,
Algeo and Pyles 2004). It was focused during a year (1986–7) the author spent
in the Survey of English Usage at University College London as a Fulbright
Senior Research Scholar and a Guggenheim Fellow. In those days, the Survey
was only beginning to be converted into electronic form, so at first research
involved hunting through paper slips and copying information by hand. Later,
as the Survey was computerized, electronic searches became possible, initially
only at the Survey office and later through a CD anywhere.
The present study later benefited from the collection of citations made by
Allen Walker Read for a historical dictionary of British lexical items. My wife,
Adele, and I then set out to supplement Read’s files with citations we collected
from more recent material than he had used, including citations for grammatical
as well as lexical matters. Our own corpus of British citations is now about three
million words in size. That is not large for a contemporary data file, but it consists
entirely of citations that we had reason to suspect exemplified British use.
Work on this book was delayed by a variety of other duties to which its author
had fallen heir. It is now presented, with painful awareness of its limitations,
but, as the French are fond of saying, faute de mieux. Undoubtedly, British and
American English are grammatically different in ways not reported here. And
some of the grammatical differences reported here may be less certain than
this book suggests because of difficulties in identifying and substantiating those
differences or because of the misapprehension of the author. Nevertheless, I hope
that it will be helpful in pinpointing various areas of structural difference between
the two major national varieties of the language.
xi
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Acknowledgments
The debts owed for help in producing this book are more than the author can
pay. The greatest debt for a labor of love is to his wife, Adele Silbereisen Algeo,
who has assisted him in this, as in all other activities during the nearly fifty years
of their married life. In particular, she has been the major collector of British
citations that compose the corpus from which most of the illustrative quotations
have been taken. She has also critiqued and proofed the text of the book at every
stage of its production.
Gratitude is also due to a succession of editors at the Cambridge University
Press who have, with kind hearts and gentle words, tolerated a succession of delays
in the book’s preparation. Likewise gratitude is due to the Cambridge University
Press for permission to use the Cambridge International Corpus, without which
statements of relative frequency in British and American use would be far more
intuitional and far less data-based than they are.
I am indebted to a variety of scholarly studies, both general and specific, for
their insights into British-American differences. These are cited in the text of this
book and listed in the bibliography of scholarly works at the end. I am particularly
indebted to the works by Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech,
and Jan Svartvik (1985), Michael Swan (1995), and Pam Peters (2004). For
existing scholarship that has not been cited here, I can only say “mea culpa, mea
culpa, mea maxima culpa.”
Individuals who, over the years, have kindly sent Adele and me quotations that
have been entered into our corpus include notably Catherine M. Algeo, Thomas
Algeo, L. R. N. Ashley, Carmen Acevedo Butcher, Ronald Butters, Tom Creswell,
Charles Clay Doyle, Virginia McDavid, Michael Montgomery, and Susan Wright
Sigalas.
Finally, and in a sense initially, I am grateful for the support of the John Simon
Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the Fulbright Senior Research Scholar
Program for support at the Survey of English Usage, University of London,
during the academic year 1986–7, when the project was begun, and to the now
departed Sidney Greenbaum, who as Quain Professor of English Language and
Literature invited me to the Survey.
xii
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Introduction
British and American as national varieties
There are many varieties of English other than British (here the English of
the United Kingdom) and American (here the English of the United States).
All of those other varieties are intrinsically just as worthy of study and use
as British and American. But these two varieties are the ones spoken by
most native speakers of English and studied by most foreign learners. They
have a special status as the two principal national varieties of the language
simply because there is more material available in them than in any other
variety.
British is the form of English now used in the country whence all other
forms of English have ultimately derived. But present-day British is not the
origin of any other variety of the language; rather it and all the other varieties
are equally descendant from a form of English spoken in the British Isles in
earlier times. In some respects, present-day British is closer to the common
ancestral form of the present-day varieties than is American or other vari-
eties; but in other respects the reverse is true, and American, for instance, pre-
serves older uses that became obsolete in British use. To mistake present-day
British for the ancestor of all other forms of English is a logical and factual
error.
The focus of this study is on how contemporary British English differs
from American. That is, in comparing two varieties of a language, it is con-
venient to take one as the basis for comparison and to describe the other
by contrast with it. This study takes American as its basis and describes
British in relation to that basis. The reason for this approach is that American
has more native speakers than British and is rapidly becoming the dominant
form of English in non-native countries other perhaps than those of Western
Europe. Much European established academic bias favors British as a model;
but evolving popular culture is biased toward American. This widespread dis-
semination of the American variety makes it a reasonable basis for describing
British.
1
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2 Introduction
Differences between British and American
The most obvious difference between British and American is in the “tune” of
the language, that is, the intonation that accompanies sentences. When a Briton
or an American talks, they identify themselves primarily by the tunes of their
respective varieties. In singing, the prose tune is overridden by the musical tune,
making it much harder to distinguish British and American singers.
Other pronunciation differences exist in stress patterns and in consonant and
vowel articulation and distribution. Those differences have been described in
fine detail. Vocabulary differences have been very widely noted between the two
varieties, and they are fairly extensive, although also often subtler than most lists
of supposed equivalences account for. Popular awareness probably centers more
on lexical differences than on any other sort, partly perhaps because they are the
easiest for the layperson to notice. Subtle differences of national style also exist,
but have been but little and only incidentally noted (Algeo 1989, Heacock and
Cassidy 1998).
Grammatical differences have been treated, but mainly by individual scholarly
studies focused on particular grammatical matters. Extensive and comprehen-
sive treatment is rare. Popular writers on grammar are aware that British and
American differ in their morphosyntax but tend to be sketchy about the details.
Anthony Burgess (1992), who is one of the linguistically best informed men of
letters, settled on a few verb forms as illustrations. The grammatical differences
between the two principal national varieties of the language are, however, man-
ifold. Some general treatments of British-American grammatical differences,
from various standpoints, are those by Randolph Quirk et al. (1985), John Algeo
(1988), Michael Swan (1995), Douglas Biber et al. (1999), Rodney Huddleston
and Geoffrey Pullum (2002), Gunnel Tottie (2002, 146–78), Peter Trudgill and
Jean Hannah (2002), and Pam Peters (2004).
Although many, few of the grammatical differences between British and Amer-
ican are great enough to produce confusion, and most are not stable because the
two varieties are constantly influencing each other, with borrowing both ways
across the Atlantic and nowadays via the Internet. When a use is said to be
British, that statement does not necessarily mean that it is the only or even the
main British use or that the use does not occur in American also, but only that the
use is attested in British sources and is more typical of British than of American
English.
The basis of this study
A distinction is often drawn between intuition and data as the basis for state-
ments about language. That dichotomy, like most others, is false. Intuition is
needed to identify matters to comment on, and data is (or, as the reader prefers,
are) needed to substantiate intuition. My wife and I have spent twenty years
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Introduction 3
gathering citations of what intuition told us were British uses. Then I set out
to substantiate those intuitions by consulting corpora of data. In most cases,
our intuitions proved correct, and the corpora yielded statistics to support
our hunches. In some cases, however, what intuition told us was a Briticism
turned out to be nothing of the sort, but instead just to be a rare or pecu-
liar use – rare and peculiar in both British and American English. And in a
few cases, we were spectacularly wrong. Linguistic intuition is invaluable but
unreliable.
Corpus data is likewise invaluable, but it has its own unreliability. The statis-
tics from any corpus should be used with care and reservations, especially in
comparing statistics from different corpora or even statistics derived from the
same corpus but in different ways. A bit of folk wisdom has it that there are three
kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics. The problems with statistics based
on language corpora include the fact that two corpora may not be comparable
because they are of different sizes or because they are composed of different kinds
of texts. Academic printed texts and conversational oral texts will have strikingly
different characteristics.
The way one phrases a search in a corpus can also produce different results; for
example, if the search engine is sensitive to capitalization, asking for examples and
statistics of a form with a lower-case initial letter may produce rather different
results than a query asking for the same information of the same form, but with an
upper-case initial letter. In this study, capitalization was taken into consideration
when it seemed potentially influential, but not otherwise.
Moreover, many grammatical items are difficult to find in a corpus unless it
has been extensively and accurately tagged, and few corpora, especially the larger
ones, have the sort of tagging that would make grammatical searches easy. Instead,
one must come up with ways of asking the corpus about instances of something
that its search engine can find and that will give at least implicit, albeit incomplete,
information about grammatical structures. Thus if one wants information about
the form of negation in sentences with indefinite direct objects (They had no
money) versus those with definite direct objects (They didn’t have the money
needed), barring sophisticated grammatical tagging, it is necessary to ask about
particular constructions (such as those just cited) and extrapolate a generalization
from them. This study generally eschews such broad extrapolation, but some was
unavoidable.
Finally, however, one relies on whatever is available. For the entries in this
study, such evidence as was convenient to extract from corpora has been cited. But
when that evidence was not readily available, intuition was still used. Any entry
with no substantiating evidence is an intuitional guess, as far as its Britishness is
concerned. In those, as well as other, cases it is advisable to keep in mind the wise
words of Oliver Cromwell to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland:
“I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be mistaken.”
The author intones those words as a mantra.
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4 Introduction
Sources of comparative statistics and citations
Statistics
In the body of this work, several corpora have been used and are cited by name,
but the one most used, especially for comparative statistics, is the Cambridge
International Corpus (CIC). Statistics from it are sometimes cited as ratios or
percentages; in those cases, the base number is of a size to make such form of
citation appropriate and easy to follow. CIC statistics are also sometimes cited
by an arcane abbreviation: “iptmw,” that is, “instances per ten million words,”
which is the way the CIC reports frequencies from its nearly two hundred million
words. The accompanying table shows the composition of this great corpus and
the relative sizes of its component parts. As can be seen, the British corpus totals
101.9 million words, of which 83 percent are written texts and 17 percent spoken
texts; the American corpus totals 96.1 million words, of which 77 percent are
written texts and 23 percent spoken texts.
CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL CORPUS
corpus million number
group corpus name words of cites contents
British BRNEWS25 25.0 60224 mixed newspapers 1988 – June 2000
written BRWRIT2 25.4 26915 fiction, nonfiction & magazines etc.
BNCWRIT1 25.1 901 British National Corpus part 1 (1979–1994)
ACAD BR 9.2 1260 British academic journals & nonfiction
84.7
British BRSPOK2 7.1 1652 spoken (lexicography) incl. Cancode/Brtrans
spoken BNCSPOK 10.1 911 British National Corpus spoken (1980–1994)
17.2
American AMNEWS25 25.0 45026 mixed newspapers 1979–1998
written AMNW01 2 22.0 23042 newspapers 2001
AMWRIT2 23.8 28453 fiction, nonfiction & magazines etc.
ACAD AM 3.6 41 American academic journals & nonfiction
74.4
American AMLEXI 6.2 764 spoken (lexicography) incl. Naec/Amspok
spoken AMSPPROF 1.9 17 spoken professional (lexicography)
AMTV 13.6 60881 TV & radio (lexicography & research)
21.7
In consulting the CIC, all textual categories were weighted equally, even
though only 17 percent of British texts and 23 percent of American texts are
spoken versus written, and 11 percent of British written texts and 5 percent
of American written texts are academic versus general. That equal weighting
emphasizes disproportionately the fewer spoken over written texts and academic
over general writing. Different weightings would very likely have produced at
least somewhat different results.
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Introduction 5
Because the focus of this study is not on speech versus writing or academic
versus general style, and because British and American are treated alike in this
respect, ignoring the differences in text types probably does not greatly affect the
general conclusions concerning British versus American use. Thus a statement
such as “daren’t is 13.9 times more frequent in British than in American” refers
to a combination of spoken and written texts in both varieties, although it is in the
nature of things that contractions are more frequent in speech than in writing.
That, however, is not the concern of this study.
The CIC is especially useful for a statistical comparison of British and Amer-
ican because of its large size and because it has roughly comparable samples of
British and American texts. As mentioned above, statistics from it are often cited
in terms of “instances per ten million words” (iptmw). When some form or con-
struction is cited as occurring X times more or less often in one variety than in
the other, or in percentages, the basis for that comparison seemed adequate, and
that style of comparison easier to understand.
Citations
In keeping with the focus on British English mentioned above, all of the illustra-
tive citations are of British use. Most of them are drawn from a corpus of British
examples compiled by Adele and John Algeo over a period of some twenty years.
That corpus consists of British citations gathered because they were suspected
to contain characteristically British features, chiefly lexical but also some gram-
matical ones. Most of the citations are from newspapers or popular fiction. The
corpus is stored electronically in word-processor format.
Illustrative quotations are generally limited to one for each entry. In many
cases the files that underlie this study contain a great many more, but space was
not available for them. Several of the chapters depend heavily on prior studies by
the author and draw both examples and exposition from articles reporting those
studies.
The sources cited are heavily in the genre of mystery novels and other light
fiction, chosen because the initial reading was for lexical purposes, and those
genres have a rich store of colloquialisms and informal language (in which British-
American differences are most pronounced) whereas serious fiction contains
fewer such items.
British fiction that has been adapted for American readers provides a useful
source to document the words and expressions that publishers change for the
American market. In the case of the Harry Potter books, a website (www.hp-
lexicon.org/) provides a list of such changes. Quotations from these books in this
work note the American adaptation when it was recorded on that site.
Many of the quotations cited here were computerized by graduate assistants
at the University of Georgia. They sometimes made mistakes in transcribing a
quotation that suggest the quotation’s use was at variance with their own native
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6 Introduction
use; such mistakes are occasionally noted as evidence for the Britishness of a
particular form.
Examples cited from publicly available corpora are identified appropriately.
Those cited from the Survey of English Usage (SEU) have corpus identification
numbers preceded by either “s” for spoken or “w” for written.
Conventions and organization of this study
Illustrative quotations are abridged when that can be done without distortion or
losing needed context. Matter omitted in the middle of a quotation is indicated
by ellipsis points; matter omitted at the beginning of a quotation is indicated
only if the retained matter does not begin with a capital letter; matter omitted at
the end of a quotation is not indicated.
In the illustrative quotations, periodical headlines have arbitrarily been printed
with initial capital letters for each word, as a device to facilitate their recognition.
The abbreviation “iptmw,” which is widely used, has been explained above as
meaning “instances per ten million words” in the CIC texts. An asterisk before a
construction (as in *go sane) means that the construction is impossible in normal
use. A question mark before a construction (as in ?They dared their friends solve
the puzzle) means that the construction is of doubtful or disputed possibility in
normal use. Cross-references from one chapter to another use the symbol §; thus
§ 2.2.2.3 means “chapter 2 section 2.2.3”. Abbreviations of titles of dictionaries,
grammars, and corpora are explained in the bibliographies of scholarly works
and of citation sources.
Studies and dictionaries are cited either by title abbreviations (e.g., CGEL),
which are identified in the bibliography, or by author and year (e.g., Peters 2004).
Citation sources are cited by date and author (e.g., 1977 Dexter) and short title,
if necessary (e.g., 1937 Innes, Hamlet) or by periodical date and title (e.g., 2003
June 12 Times 20/2; for location in a periodical, “2 4/2–3” means “section 2,
page 4, columns 2 to 3”).
In headwords and glosses to them, general terms representing contextual ele-
ments are italicized, e.g., pressurize someone means that the verb pressurize
takes a personal object.
A comment that a construction is “rare” means that the Algeo corpus contains
few examples, often only one, and that CIC has no or very few instances of
it. Such constructions are included because they illustrate a pattern. The term
“common-core English” designates usage common to the two varieties, British
and American, and not differing significantly between them.
Of the seventeen following chapters, the first ten deal with parts of speech,
and the final seven with matters of syntax or phrase and clause constructions.
Because the verb is central to English grammatical constructions, it is considered
in Chapter 1. Thereafter, the elements of the noun phrase are taken up: deter-
miners, nouns, pronouns, and adjectives. Adverbs and qualifiers (i.e., adverbs
of degree) follow, succeeded by prepositions and conjunctions, with the highly