julesjones: (Default)
julesjones ([personal profile] julesjones) wrote2012-08-18 05:31 pm

a random bit of editing dialogue

Excerpt from my comments on the latest version of edits on Bargain:

"Were I English I would bitch about this, because many, many of the English believe that 'gotten' does not exist in any British dialect. Since I am Northern Irish, I am glad you corrected something I did out of years of habit formed from writing English characters..."
kalypso: (Jarriere)

[personal profile] kalypso 2012-08-18 05:48 pm (UTC)(link)
The Irish use it? I've heard a couple of people doing it recently, and couldn't work out why - don't think they were Irish.
kalypso: (Jarriere)

[personal profile] kalypso 2012-08-18 06:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, but I also remember coming across an American belief that the English really used "gotten" and just pretended we didn't out of snobbery. Somebody proudly pointed to Avon saying "gotten" in a Blake's Seven transcript, until we pointed out that the episode had been transcribed by American fans who had naturally heard what they expected to hear; replaying the scene didn't reveal an extra syllable.

I'm definitely beginning to hear it around the place now, and think it's still more likely to be returning from America than re-emerging from current dialects.
watervole: (Default)

[personal profile] watervole 2012-08-20 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
I use 'gotten' as a conscious choice. I feel it fills a gap in English. I only wish the Americans would do likewise and use 'fitted'.
kalypso: (Jarriere)

[personal profile] kalypso 2012-08-20 12:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't actually know when to use it. I used to think I did - it looked straightforward enough - but [livejournal.com profile] green_maia said I'd misunderstood the nuances, so now I'm baffled. If I had to write American characters, I would ask an American to read it through and tell me what needed changing.