Saturday, 2 August 2014

Autumn or Fall?

Autumn or Fall?


Why can’t Americans admit they have rewritten the English language. Fall for Autumn, color for colour. –Diane, comment onAmong/Amongst
Changing colour to color can be blamed on American dictionary maker Noah Webster, but Fall forAutumn deserves another look.
Taking the vocabulary of Old English as a starting point, both Fall and Autumnas names for the season between summer and winter are late-comers.
Fall derives from an Old English verb, but it wasn’t used as a noun to designate the season until the 16th century. This use most likely developed from the Middle English expression “fall of the leaf.”
So what did Old English speakers call the season?
Harvest.
The need for a new word arose from a population shift that made cities more important than farmland. From being a word for the season, harvest came to refer only to the agricultural event that occurs in that season.
Autumn as a word for the season came into common usage about the same time as Fall did. The English who settled the eastern American seaboard brought the word Fall with them from the homeland. The English who stayed home eventually adopted the word Autumn.
Nowadays in England “Fall” sounds archaic and poetic, but in U.S. English “Autumn” has those connotations.
Check out this comprehensive Wikipedia article on differences between British and American spelling.

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