-262 It's aeroplane, not airplane, amirite?

by Anonymous 12 years ago

"In the United Kingdom and most of the Commonwealth, the term "aeroplane" is used. The word derives from the Greek αέρας (aéras-) ("air") and -plane. In the United States and Canada, the term "airplane" is applied to these aircraft. The form "aeroplane" is the older of the two, dating back to the mid- to late-19th century. The spelling "airplane" was first recorded in 1907." Put that in your pipe and smoke it, yanks.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

1. I don't smoke. 2. Your comment makes no argument to why it should be aeroplane. 3. Who cares?

by Anonymous 12 years ago

American spelling is simpler I think.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

AND ONE DAY WE WILL DIE AND OUR ASHES WILL FLY FROM THE AEROPLANE OVER THE SEA

by Anonymous 12 years ago

dammit, I was gonna post that.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

hehe

by Anonymous 12 years ago

Great song. I'm gonna go listen to it now that you have reminded me of it. :)

by Anonymous 12 years ago

I couldn't really give a shit how it's spelt and I don't know why you do.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

"spelt Noun /spelt/ An old kind of wheat with bearded ears and spikelets that each contain two narrow grains, not widely grown but favored as a health food"

by Anonymous 12 years ago

"Either are correct. Spelt is simply considered "old english" and is less used in America. But both are correct."

by Anonymous 12 years ago

Lol I was just being ironic (joking). Aeroplane/airplane. Spelling differences in different countries. Yknow.

by Anonymous 12 years ago

haha alright, my bad :P

by Anonymous 12 years ago

If your talking about the Red Hot Chili Peppers song, then yeah!

by Anonymous 12 years ago

Gimme a ticket for an aeroplane, ain't got time to take a fast train...

by Anonymous 12 years ago

Are we really going to start with the 'colour/color' argument again? Because we all concluded that 'colour' wins in 2010 already. hehe

by Anonymous 12 years ago