I have a Toyota Paseo/Cynos. In the envrionmental impact thread it is mentioned that Selenium is an evil substance. I also have a Tomioka radioactive lens. My Glasses are done by Pentax.
What would happen if I put the M42 Tomioka onto my selenium Zenit E while sitting in my car and wearing my glasses?
I have a Toyota Paseo/Cynos. In the envrionmental impact thread it is mentioned that Selenium is an evil substance. I also have a Tomioka radioactive lens. My Glasses are done by Pentax.
What would happen if I put the M42 Tomioka onto my selenium Zenit E while sitting in my car and wearing my glasses?
No... Harbour.
It's English!!
Steve.
I try not to talk about Portsmouth... or even go there, even though it's only four miles away (by boat).
So what do you call that language you are using?!
Steve.
American, a "dialect" of English.
No... Harbour.
It's English!!
Steve.
I think your'e right and I stand corrected, but I was educated in England and we are truly "two nations separated by the same language ", one of my sons went to university in the U.S.at U.C. Berkeley and in has English classes had trouble with American spelling, which when you think about it is kind of ironic.No, it's "Pearl Harbor". That is how it is spelled. It is an American name.
It would be incorrect for me to change the spelling of an England place name to American spelling; so it is with the converse. "Pearl Harbor" is the correct English spelling in England, and "Pearl Harbour" is incorrect.
Pearl Harbor is in Hawaii, which we (USA) stole from Queen Lili'oukalani in 1893. So, being American territory (for good or ill), the American spelling of "harbor" is the correct one.
Now, if you were talking about Portsmouth, you'd be correct!
With the advent of texting...
U wl fnd U bth R wrng.
Kids are turning in term papers like this these days.
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I think your'e right and I stand corrected, but I was educated in England and we are truly "two nations separated by the same language ", one of my sons went to university in the U.S.at U.C. Berkeley and in has English classes had trouble with American spelling, which when you think about it is kind of ironic.
What I said.
If you were to require people to accept the alternate spelling, you would have to allow people from the USA to spell "Leicester" as "Lester".
I think the "Harbor" in "Pearl Harbor" is a proper noun, so the spelling should not include the "u".
If you were to require people to accept the alternate spelling, you would have to allow people from the USA to spell "Leicester" as "Lester".
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