In the United States, what many people refer to as "brackets" in the context of sports or tournaments are often called "brackets" themselves. However, in British English, the term "bracket" typically refers to punctuation marks (like parentheses), while "football pools" or "tournaments" might be used for similar competitive structures. Thus, the American usage of the term remains distinct in that context.
Americans usually call a house "a house", sometimes "real estate".
They call it cream too.
the native americans call the buffalo tatanka. the white buffalo is sacred to the native americans.
undershirt
A ride
Americans call a thong a thong.
they call Americans Pigs
Americans call a tap a FAUCET. Your welcome!
Americans call jelly, JELLO, and our jam they call jelly. Weird i know.
we call them Indians but they prefer native Americans
Angle brackets, like this: <html>
Americans call coriander leaves "coriander" or "cilantro."
A shocking 76 percent of Americans live paycheck to paycheck. This is the same across all income brackets, not just the lower ones.
The different types of brackets are: * round brackets, open brackets or parentheses: ( ) * square brackets, closed brackets or box brackets: [ ] * curly brackets, squiggly brackets, swirly brackets, braces, or chicken lips: { } * angle brackets, diamond brackets, cone brackets or chevrons: < > or ⟨ ⟩
The different types of brackets are: * round brackets, open brackets or parentheses: ( ) * square brackets, closed brackets or box brackets: [ ] * curly brackets, squiggly brackets, swirly brackets, braces, or chicken lips: { } * angle brackets, diamond brackets, cone brackets or chevrons: < > or ⟨ ⟩
Americans usually call a house "a house", sometimes "real estate".
Basement is the word most Americans use. Some people call it a cellar.