I have many friends and acquaintances whose first language is English, but they are not from the United States. As a little girl, I read many stories written by authors from these countries, so I realized that American US English was not always the same as British English, which was spoken elsewhere. I remembering feeling a bit more "cultured" when I was able to recognize recognise the differences, utilize utilise them when I wrote, and find some humor humour in how I might use other words strategically, though defined much differently in common language. The difference? The country where it was spoken.

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The tush. The rear. The behind. The posterior.


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Very interesting. As another example we assume that the French language, so well guarded by the Academy has been set in stone for centuries; not true. Until the time of Napoleon the most popular word for 'yes' outside of Paris was not 'oui' but 'oik'! I'm afraid, Dave, I don't agree. I think we may disregard the gap in the OED evidence.
Related to Hiney: honey badger. Either of the two rounded prominences on the human torso that are posterior to the hips and formed by the gluteal muscles and underlying structures. Switch to new thesaurus. Related words technical name nates adjectives natal , gluteal. Mentioned in?