colour
"Favourite".
That is the correct US spelling of "gray matter" (brain tissue). The predominant UK and Canadian spelling of the color is "grey."
It's spelled Vacuum. This is the American spelling like "color" instead of the British "Colour". Another spelling is Vacume (Canadian) There is not always one way to spell words as many have been co-opted by cultures like American. As we speak English I would go with the British spelling. Vacuum.
In Canadian English, "aunt" is spelled the same way as in British and American English: "aunt." There is no distinct Canadian variation for this word. However, pronunciation may vary regionally, with some Canadians using a more pronounced "aw" sound.
In Canada, the spelling of color is colour, as in the UK and Australia.
The British way of spelling color, is 'colour'
There is no difference between "color" and "color." They are simply alternate spellings of the same word, with the former being the American English spelling and the latter being the British English spelling.
"Favourite".
That is the Canadian spelling.
That is the correct US spelling of "gray matter" (brain tissue). The predominant UK and Canadian spelling of the color is "grey."
It's spelled Vacuum. This is the American spelling like "color" instead of the British "Colour". Another spelling is Vacume (Canadian) There is not always one way to spell words as many have been co-opted by cultures like American. As we speak English I would go with the British spelling. Vacuum.
In Canada, the spelling of "color" follows the British English convention, which adds a "u" to the word, making it "colour." This is in contrast to the American English spelling, which does not include the "u." The difference in spelling is a result of historical linguistic influences on Canadian English, which has retained some British English conventions.
In Canadian English, "aunt" is spelled the same way as in British and American English: "aunt." There is no distinct Canadian variation for this word. However, pronunciation may vary regionally, with some Canadians using a more pronounced "aw" sound.
In Canada, the spelling of color is colour, as in the UK and Australia.
The alternate spelling of the keyword "color" is "colour."
People or things from Canada are "Canadian". (The French / Canadian spelling is Canadien.)
they are both right just different if you are American or Canadian . Not quite: "fibre" is the U.K. spelling (The Queen's English), which is the accepted Canadian spelling--but the Prairie provinces prefer "fiber".