Uttar Pradesh is the Florida of the world, but like, way worse.
But fire has long been used in scientific experiments. You’re a lab rat.
US defaultism? In most western countries people don’t, and aren’t allowed to, carry guns.
Me neither.
Typical. My bedroom only has standard earth gravity around the clock.
Another LLM of course.
Have you tried modulating your intake? Too much will most definitely make you a moron. Small amounts have a positive effect on me.
Are we about to discover the first extraterrestrial lifeforms around Uranus?
He should have kept his pole in a vault during competition.
Paiden? That’s a weird one. Payme on the other hand, now that’s a good name.
With the powers that be, I wonder how much he could have gotten done with actually fixing America. He’d be blocked everywhere by everyone with power, hell he might even have had an “accident”, or caught a bullet outright.
Thank you.
That’s what I’m saying! It does not say anywhere that it’s spelled extrAverted in the UK. If anything it says the exact opposite.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, “The original spelling ‘Extravert’ is now rare in general use but is found in technical use in psychology.”
(emphasis mine)
Maybe I’m tired but this comment reads to me as if you’re disagreeing with me when everything you say supports what I said? My objection/question was how you came to the conclusion it’s a US/UK thing. There’s no support for that in the article.
Correct. But extrOvert makes no sense, etymologically (latin). The dictionaries accept it, but I (jokingly) don’t.
Tldr A British English, O American English
What? How did you get to that conclusion? That’s not what the article says at all? It says Phyllis Blanchard used the (then incorrect) spelling with an O (while also changing the definition of the term to something most people I think would disagree with) in a paper she wrote and nobody knows why. And it spread from there.
I think you’re interpreting “Today, ExtrOvert is the most common spelling of the term in the United States.” to mean it’s spelled with an A elsewhere, but the author even brings up the Oxford Dictionary (UK) that says that the original spelling with an A is rare in general use. I live outside the US and I pretty much exclusively see the O-spelling.
EDIT: Changed from “incorrect” to “then incorrect” to clarify. She wrote her article before extrOvert entered the dictionary, and - according to the author of the article linked earlier in this thread - her article might have been a big contributing factor for it entering the dictionary that was published soon after.
I get so much satisfaction whenever I see extravert spelled correctly, which is very rare these days.
Did he grab a hold of you and slap you in the face while talking to you in human language?