Americans and people who are taught English by Americans
the American culture predominately uses the English language.
American Sign Language (ASL) is a visual-gestural language that uses handshapes, facial expressions, and body movements to convey meaning, while English is a spoken and written language that uses words and grammar. ASL has its own syntax and structure that is different from English, and it does not rely on the same linguistic features such as verb tenses or articles. Additionally, ASL is a distinct language with its own vocabulary and grammar rules, separate from English.
American isn't a language. English is spoken in the US as well as Spanish. The English is often called "American English" as there are differences compared to "British English"
Yes, American English is considered a dialect of the English language.
Both English people and Americans speak English, but with differences in vocabulary, pronunciation, and grammar. American English has evolved separately from British English and has its own unique characteristics.
They are both correct. Note: Cambridge uses British English.
Australia officially uses British-English.The correct spelling in British-English (and therefore in Australia) is centre.In American-English, the correct spelling is center. American-English is considered incorrect in British-English countries.
British spelling uses optimisation. American spelling uses optimization. So both are correct.
I would guess that by American you mean English? If you mean the native American languages then no, of course not. English is not Latin based either, though many English words come from Latin. English, like most western languages uses the latin alphabet.
Learnt is a verb (past tense of learn) used in British English. American English uses learned as the past tense.
the American culture predominately uses the English language.
Merchandizing is the American-English spelling.If your country uses British-English (UK, Australia, etc), the correct spelling is merchandising.American spelling in countries where the official English is British-English is considered incorrect.
There is no American English word that uses all those letters. Here is the best you can do: betake, betime, tibiae
There are some common rules for American English. * Where UK, Australian and NZ English often use the letter group of our, in American English the u is omitted. In the following examples, the first is UK English and the second is American English: favourite / favorite neighbour / neighbor colour / color * UK English uses an s where American English often substitutes a z. In the following examples, the first is UK English and the second is American English: capitalisation / capitalization recognise / recognize * In word building, UK English doubles the final consonant where it is preceded by a vowel, whereas American English does not. For example: traveller / traveler labelled / labeled * Some words which are spelt with a 'c' in the noun form but an 's' in the verb form of some words are not spelt with the 'c' in American English - both noun and verb forms retain the 's'. practice/practise in U.K. and Australian English is always practise in American English. licence/license is always license in American English.
American drama uses english language while british drama uses british language and they also differ because they came from different countries. They are similar because they are both drama.
Spelling in American English is a little different from spelling in British English; both are English. In addition, many people who can speak a language fluently do not necessarily know how to spell words in that language, yet they still "use" that language. For example, a little child "uses" English but probably cannot spell the words that he or she "uses."
American Sign Language (ASL) is a visual-gestural language that uses handshapes, facial expressions, and body movements to convey meaning, while English is a spoken and written language that uses words and grammar. ASL has its own syntax and structure that is different from English, and it does not rely on the same linguistic features such as verb tenses or articles. Additionally, ASL is a distinct language with its own vocabulary and grammar rules, separate from English.