Americanisms in Vietnamese

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Sentence patterns related to "Americanisms"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "Americanisms" from the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "Americanisms", or refer to the context using the word "Americanisms" in the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary.

1. Americanisms synonyms, Americanisms pronunciation, Americanisms translation, English dictionary definition of Americanisms

2. Americanisms; Americanisms are uniquely American thoughts, beliefs, or actions

3. "A lot of other supposed Americanisms aren't Americanisms either

4. Americanisms with description and examples

5. 10 Americanisms That Aren’t All-American

6. 7 Americanisms that Brits will never understand

7. 0 Barbaric Americanisms: Why do some Americanisms irritate people? How do you feel about the barbaric Americanisms ruining English? Those interested in language should take a moment to read this amusing article on the BBC, entitled Why do some Americanisms irritate people?

8. Americanised; Americanish; Americanisms; Americanist; americanista; American Italian

9. The battle to keep Americanisms from creeping into our media

10. Some Americanisms are words that have arisen in the USA and have

11. 1848, John Russell Bartlett, Dictionary of Americanisms: ‘This is a Buster,’ i.e

12. Morton was well known for her Americanisms, her swagger dinner parties, and beautiful

13. Chapter I. Vocabulary Americanisms THOUGH we take these separately from foreign words, which will follow next, the distinction is purely pro forma; Americanisms are foreign words, and should be so treated

14. That's Not English: Britishisms, Americanisms, and What Our English Says About Us by

15. The Americanisms are words borrowed from American Indian languages and used in other languages

16. Americanisms; Dating Culture 101 in the United States; Dating Culture 101 in the United States

17. Americanism (countable and uncountable, plural Americanisms) A custom peculiar to the United States or the Americans

18. The existence of Briticisms and of Americanisms and of Australianisms is a sign of healthy vitality

19. A book released this year claims that Americanisms will have completely absorbed the English language by 2120

20. U.S.) Susie Dent presented an excellent and engaging program(me) on BBC Radio 4 about Americanisms in British English

21. That's Not English: Britishisms, Americanisms, and What Our English Says About Us - Kindle edition by Moore, Erin, Truss, Lynne

22. Our recent piece on Americanisms entering the language in the UK prompted thousands of you to e-mail examples

23. But a Google search of the word “Americanisms” turns up claims that they are swamping, killing and absorbing British English

24. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading That's Not English: Britishisms, Americanisms, and What Our English Says About Us.

25. Americanisms lexical, phonetic, and grammatical peculiarities of the English language in the USA which represent comparatively few deviations from the British literary norm

26. Ridiculosity was a submission entered in an article in the BBC News Magazine, titled “Americanisms: 50 of your Most Noted Examples.” While this

27. What's In A Word? A 'Dictionary' Of Americanisms Sky looking a little slatchy to you? Want another helping of slang-jang? The final volume of …

28. In 1859, Cobbler was defined in John Russell Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms as: “A sort of pie, baked in a pot lined with dough of great thickness, …

29. Is the slow creep of Americanisms into the British vernacular a pernicious assault on our linguistic heritage, or should we just chill? Things mentioned in this podcast

30. "Neither usage," said Professor Freeman, after contrasting certain Americanisms and Briticisms, "can be said to be in itself better or worse than the other

31. Top 10 Americanisms That Really Annoy British PeoplePut away the potato chips, say no to sweaters and fight the fanny pack! For this list, we're laying waste

32. A Dictionary of Americanisms, two-volume dictionary of words and expressions that originated in the United States or that were first borrowed into the English language in the United States

33. UPON reading S Burley's letter (Letters, May 2) I felt huge empathy with his/her statements about "false Americanisms" coming into frequent use over here now

34. 'Let's Touch Base' On The Americanisms Brits Love To Hate American words and phrases such as "step up to the plate, and "24/7" are now common in …

35. Americanisms, Old and New: A Dictionary of Words, Phrases and Colloquialisms Peculiar to the United States, British America, the West Indies, Etc by John Stephen Farmer (Editor) 1.5 out of 5 stars 3 ratings

36. The reliable, talented, and influential British journalist Matthew Engel, author of the tremendous That’s the Way It Crumbles: The American Conquest of the English Language, is the acknowledged authority on Americanisms that have successfully invaded British English

37. Some things still might not make much sense, but at least you’ll be prepared when you come face to face with our strange “Americanisms.” Ten strange habits and customs you’ll find in the United States 1

38. The resolution – which called on the Legion to speak up forcefully against “Bolshevism, IWWism, radicalism and all other anti-Americanisms” – urged Legion post members to be “a constructive force for the upbuilding of a vital knowledge of the principles of the Constitution of the United States and the process of law and order

39. Good conversation features Colloquialisms, colour and the natural rhythm of speech.: He was a quiet boy with an active imagination and he became captivated by the Colloquialisms of the ordinary people around in Duagh.: The illustrations were augmented, and the entry and definition coverage expanded to include Americanisms, slang, and Colloquialisms

40. Early writers on Americanisms were wont to stamp every odd or vulgar word and expression as American, with the lamentable result, as Richard Grant White complained, of creating a belief that there is a distinctive American language, “a barbarous, hybrid dialect, grafted upon English stock;” the truth being that most of the so-called

41. OED notes that the variant form chow was "very common in 16-17th c." Bartlett's "Dictionary of Americanisms" [1859] says Chaw, "Although found in good authors, is retained, in this country as in England, only by the illiterate."Related: Chawed; Chawing.The noun meaning "that which is chewed" (especially a