The Gang of Five
Beyond the Mysterious Beyond => The Fridge => Topic started by: Mumbling on October 01, 2009, 02:03:59 PM
-
Hello GoF
I've been wondering for a long time what spelling is correct, grey or gray, or if they are both correct and just have a different meaning.
I've seen both words used in the same context, just to describe a colour. As in Dan Brown's latest book, I noticed he uses 'the gray eyes'. However, if I zap a pet on neopets, it will turn Grey, not Gray... So what exactly is the difference. Is it maybe the difference in brittish and american english?
Thanks for clearing it up for me, if anyone knows :DD
-
They're both correct, and both refer to the same color.
-
Same color, different spelling. One is more common among the British, the other is more common in the US.
-
According to www.leo.org gray would be more common in American and grey in British English.
-
Okay, well that clears things up. Thanks :)
-
Your welcome! :)
-
If you want verification from a brat who actually has to deal with the prose, I can tell ya that "grey" (with the "e") is the Brits' way of spelling it. There are other examples of UK/US spelling difference. Most are only minor but depending on which side of the Great Pond you're on will determine a tick or a cross on your English spelling test! :DD
Other examples (UK/US):
U - colour/color, favourite/favorite
S/Z - realise/realize, symbolise/symbolize, analyse/analyze
RE/ER - centre/center
Other difference would come down to the difference in pronounciation. Words like "mum" and "mom". Schedule is another one. Do you say "sked-ual" or "shed-ual"? A UK bloke would write a "cheque" but a US fella would write a "check" (I think). There are lots of others... ;)
-
I always use "grey" when I'm writing, but then it tells me it's wrong so I always do the correction and spell it "gray". Even now in FireFox it says that "grey" is spelled wrong. :p
-
I usually use gray, although I think grey looks cooler.
-
I use grey.
-
I always use grey, too.
Gray just seems innacurate to me, for some reason. I don't like it.
-
I think the a sticks out in gray. It doesn't flow with the letters like the e in grey.
-
Which version is supposed to be American and which one English is easy to remember :p
A = America E = England.
-
I'm American, but I use grey to refer to the color. When it's a name (say, for a fictional character) I'd use Gray. Course, I also use "Theatre" and say process with a long o.
-
I use "Gray" when I spell it...
I'm also amazed we have said so much about it. Not that I think it is BAD or anything... it must set some sort of record on a conversation of how to spell a four letter word...
-
it must set some sort of record on a conversation of how to spell a four letter word...
Not sure if it was intended to be humorous, but I laughed when I read that line. :lol
I say gray. :p It's the version I originally learned; plus I seem to have a preference for phonetically spelled words. "Grey" looks almost like it would be pronounced "gree". :p
-
I use grey and gray both for names. Gray's Anatomy vs Grey's Anatomy. The first is a textbook, the second is a TV show
-
If you want verification from a brat who actually has to deal with the prose, I can tell ya that "grey" (with the "e") is the Brits' way of spelling it. There are other examples of UK/US spelling difference. Most are only minor but depending on which side of the Great Pond you're on will determine a tick or a cross on your English spelling test! :DD
Other examples (UK/US):
U - colour/color, favourite/favorite
S/Z - realise/realize, symbolise/symbolize, analyse/analyze
RE/ER - centre/center
Other difference would come down to the difference in pronounciation. Words like "mum" and "mom". Schedule is another one. Do you say "sked-ual" or "shed-ual"? A UK bloke would write a "cheque" but a US fella would write a "check" (I think). There are lots of others... ;)
Thanks Littlefoot, that sure clears up a whole bunch. Most of you might have noticed I use both Z/S in most cases since I'm just unsure :angel
Oh well! :p If we want to keep discussing the difference, go ahead :D
it must set some sort of record on a conversation of how to spell a four letter word...
:lol
-
Lol, I didn't know that. I always wondered why some people spelled it "grey" or "gray".
Anyhow, I was raised spelling "gray". I never really used "grey" that much. :p