a lift is an elevator
Yes, British English is considered a dialect of the English language.
Phlurgleshnordt is not the name of a dialect.
In British English, "lift" refers to an elevator, used to move people or goods between floors in a building.
No, American English is pretty distinct from British English at this point, especially what most people think of as a Southern dialect. The closest dialect of American English to British English (I assume you mean BBC British, because British dialects get more disparate the farther down the social ladder they go) is probably something in New England very near the East Coast, or maybeupper-class coastal Southern English. The problem is that the accents have remained more similar than the dialects have.
A bosom is generally defined as the upper area of a human's chest both male and female. It can also be the breast area of a woman, or clothing that covers that area.
Yes, British English is considered a dialect of the English language.
Phlurgleshnordt is not the name of a dialect.
No. American dialect is different from the British.
We call it a wiper.
A burnstickle is a British dialect term for a stickleback.
If anything, it came from 70's 'culture shock', not from any regional British dialect.
The British word 'lift' means the same as the American elevator
In British English, "lift" refers to an elevator, used to move people or goods between floors in a building.
No, American English is pretty distinct from British English at this point, especially what most people think of as a Southern dialect. The closest dialect of American English to British English (I assume you mean BBC British, because British dialects get more disparate the farther down the social ladder they go) is probably something in New England very near the East Coast, or maybeupper-class coastal Southern English. The problem is that the accents have remained more similar than the dialects have.
that would be "Mum"( in British )dialect called Cockney
A bantling is a British dialect term for an infant or young child.
A lift