Commonwealth English

From Homestar Runner Wiki

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Examples)
(Examples)
Line 13: Line 13:
**The example of Elizabethan English mocks the -th suffix used in English for the second person at the time.
**The example of Elizabethan English mocks the -th suffix used in English for the second person at the time.
*[[Coach Zed]] uses the Commonwealth name for the letter Z, pronounced Zee in the US.
*[[Coach Zed]] uses the Commonwealth name for the letter Z, pronounced Zee in the US.
 +
*The [[heavy lourde]] uses a mock Old English name, as well as the Gourde which replaced it in [[Doomy Tales of the Macabre]].
[[Category: Word running gags]]
[[Category: Word running gags]]

Revision as of 01:24, 12 August 2015

Commonwealth English is English as it is spoken and spelled in the Commonwealth countries, a collection of former British territories. This form of English dialect is noticeably different from that which exists in the United States, and the two have been compared for many years. Throughout the Homestar Runner body of work, this form of English has been mocked or parodied in at least some form.

Examples

  • Fan Stuff asks if a new character is the viewer's "flavourite", a portmanteau of the Commonwealth spellings of "flavor" and "favorite".
  • The Lost Email mentions that the sender, Mark, should "have an unnecessary vowel at the end" (with Strong Bad changing the name to "Marke"). This reflects spelling differences between American and British spellings of such words as "annex/annexe" and "ax/axe". Also mentioned is the substance "treacle", which is an archaic and Old English sounding name for "molasses".
    • The email features Strong Bad responding to his controversial email by saying "screw all y'all". In response to the gasps of the audience, a voice with a Liverpool accent remarks "I can't believe he said that.", reflecting a Beatles controversy and especially mocking their accent (especially that of drummer Ringo Starr).
  • The 1936 era mocks Commonwealth English to some extent by using old fashioned words and phrases. Such vocabulary often includes Commonwealth spellings and is typically viewed by Americans as "archaic".
  • Thy Dungeonman and its sequels use a mock form of Elizabethan English in an attempt to sound medieval, also relying upon the American view of such English vocabulary as "archaic".
  • In the interview, Strong Bad provides a description of the Kerreck using an Old English font, commonly associated with Medieval and Gothic England, where Peasant's Quest (where Trogdor, mentioned in the description, is a main character) is supposed to take place.
  • The King of Town describes in his character video that he "lives in yon castle".
  • In radio, Strong Bad tells Frasier not to bow and "giveth [him] instead $7.50". The -eth suffix was used in English during Elizabethan times as a form of the second person.
  • In love poems, Strong Bad uses Elizabethan English as an example of how to write a love poem. He also references how such English is highly regarded as poetic.
    • The example of Elizabethan English mocks the -th suffix used in English for the second person at the time.
  • Coach Zed uses the Commonwealth name for the letter Z, pronounced Zee in the US.
  • The heavy lourde uses a mock Old English name, as well as the Gourde which replaced it in Doomy Tales of the Macabre.
Personal tools