Question:
Color vs Colour?
zoocherry8
2008-07-22 07:38:46 UTC
Is here in america the only english speaking place on earth where we spell color without a 'u'
Twenty answers:
yogeshwargarg
2008-07-22 08:36:51 UTC
The word colour is spelled as color in American English.It is spelled without 'u' in America only.The meanings of the two words are same.

The colour or color of something is the appearance that it has as a result of the way in which it reflects light. Red,blue,green,yellow are colours.

*
pihl
2016-09-30 15:09:56 UTC
Color Vs Colour
Allen
2015-04-21 12:58:34 UTC
There is no difference between Color and Colour except spelling. Color is preferred in American English and Colour is preferred in all other countries. This difference extends to other derived words as well like Colored / Colorful / Discolor for US and Coloured / Colourful / Discolour for outside US.



Computer programming languages like HTML prefer 'Color' rather than 'Colour'.

Similar difference is applicable for many other words as well like Honor or Honour, Behaviour or Behavior , Flavor or Flavour
blog
2015-04-01 23:30:47 UTC
There is no difference between Color and Colour except spelling. Color is preferred in American English and Colour is preferred in all other countries. This difference extends to other derived words as well like Colored / Colorful / Discolor for US and Coloured / Colourful / Discolour for outside US.



Computer programming languages like HTML prefer Color rather than Colour .

Similar difference is applicable for many other words as well like Honor or Honour, Behaviour or Behavior , Flavor or Flavour
Boothe
2016-01-27 03:50:50 UTC
color colour
Random
2015-12-12 11:24:12 UTC
Both are the same thing. Color is American & Colour is British
john
2015-07-28 12:10:31 UTC
To me color sounds Spanish! End of story!
gldjns
2008-07-22 07:44:49 UTC
I'm not sure, but colour and many othe words ending in O-R are commonly spelled that way in the United Kingdom, from which our English language is derived. Americans seem to like simplicity in language, and have dropped the "U", but I don't know about other countries. I guess it's a regional choice, since there is no difference in meaning between colour and color.
Jay Biwal
2015-06-29 06:14:32 UTC
Have you ever wondered why the British spell “color” with a “u” and Americans don’t? Or why the British spell “theater” with an “re” at the end and Americans spell it with an “er” at the end? We all know that these spelling differences exist, but not everyone knows why they exist. Today, we’re going to find out!



It turns out that Noah Webster of Webster’s dictionary fame is behind many, but not all, of the spelling differences between British and American English, and his reasons for making the changes were as much political and philosophical as linguistic. I was inspired to do this podcast by a book I just finished, called The Forgotten Founding Father: Noah Webster’s Obsession and the Creation of an American Culture by Joshua Kendall. I know many of you reading are not Americans, but I hope you will indulge me and end up finding this story as interesting as I do.





Early America

Noah Webster lived smack in the middle of the time when Americans were still trying to form a country and figure out who they were. To give you some perspective, the United States Constitution was ratified between the time Webster published his first spelling book and when he started working on his famous dictionary.



Americans were eager to break with Britain as fully as possible and weren’t even sure that English should be the primary language. Nearly 10% of the population spoke German, so some people suggested German should be our language. Others proposed Hebrew, and others thought we should call our language Columbian.



“Zee” Versus “Zed”

Noah Webster's influence is why Americans call the final letter "zee" instead of "zed."

Webster undertook his first big project--an American spelling book to replace the British book schools were then using--in part, to settle the matter and convince people that our language should be English, but American English. It was in this book that he took small steps to begin creating American spellings. It was also in the speller that he taught Americans to pronounce the name of the final letter of the alphabet as “zee” instead of “zed” as the British do.



Political Rationale for Spelling Reform

Webster is best known now as the dictionary writer, but in his time he was involved in politics and knew George Washington and Benjamin Franklin quite well. He regularly wrote political essays, letters, and tracts, and early in his career, he felt that an American language was necessary to hold the country together. In his lectures, he criticized Americans for studying Hebrew, Greek, Latin, French, and German, but neglecting English; and he wrote, “America must be as independent in literature as she is in politics---as famous for arts as for arms.”



The Compendious Dictionary: “Color” Versus “Colour” and More

Before he wrote his big dictionary, he wrote a smaller book titled the Compendious Dictionary, and it was in this work that he really got rolling on spelling reform. For example,



He dropped the “u” from “colour,” “honour,” and “a few words of that class” as he called them in his introduction.



He changed “theatre” (re) to “theater "(er).



He substituted an “s” for the “c” in “defence," “offence,” and “pretence.”



He dropped the second “l” in words such as “travelled” and “cancelled.”



He changed the “s” to “z” in a few words such as “patronise.”



He also included changes that had already been suggested by others such as omitting the “k” from the end of “magic” and “logic” and spelling “risk” with a “k” instead of a “que” at the end.



- See more at: http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/why-we-have-both-%E2%80%9Ccolor%E2%80%9D-and-%E2%80%9Ccolour%E2%80%9D#sthash.hz4oSUCw.dpuf
Wan
2014-08-08 01:51:20 UTC
color - us english

colour - uk english
bolikas
2014-08-08 23:45:45 UTC
Who listen to such a lame thing called Usher ???? Come one, there are bands playing real music out there... I think my speakers would stop working in case of Usher being played....
anonymous
2016-03-27 02:33:36 UTC
For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/0Jp3e



the ground is green even at night i see more green
anonymous
2015-05-06 10:00:16 UTC
In the UK they spell it "colour" too I think.
victoria
2016-02-22 20:25:51 UTC
i thought it was color
anonymous
2016-08-17 01:20:06 UTC
This is a good question, and one that has intrigued me for quite a while.
hershey
2008-07-22 07:58:54 UTC
British English usually spell the word "color" to "colour" . basically they have the same meanings there are just words that differ in spelling..



you can check the difference of British English and American English on this blog:



www.getmybooks.blogspot.com under language category..
anonymous
2014-04-18 23:22:03 UTC
pretty much only in america they spell i "color" in Australia, England, France etc they would spell it "colour"

which my mac always auto-corrects it too color...

which pisses me off



from

whole of Australia who has macs.
<3 Due September 2010 <3
2008-07-22 07:56:04 UTC
In england we spell it colour
Miupony~
2008-07-22 07:57:14 UTC
never thought about that but i think ur rite
anonymous
2008-07-22 07:49:28 UTC
I think so, cos what people do is copy what Americans do especially

Let's take it for instance, Usher's Song



Pop ya color



People have taken that kind of spelling


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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