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What do AmE and BrE after English words mean?

AmE = American English American English, BrE = British English British English.

Key words:

1, USA

English [mer? k? ] ? Beauty [mer? k? ] ?

United States; America.

His? Work? Used to be. On display? Are you online? That? The best? Gallery? Are you online? America? Europe? And then what? Asia. ?

His works are exhibited in the best art galleries in America, Europe and Asia.

2. English

English [? ɡl]? Beauty [? ɡl]?

English; English; English language and literature (as a subject); English subjects; English (sometimes mistaken for British people including Scots, Welsh and Northern Irish).

English; English; English

English? Student? Is it? Forced? Where to? Study? Also? A lot? Also? Soon. ?

British students are forced to learn too much in a short time.

3. Britain

English [? br? tn]? Beauty [? br? tn]?

Britain (including England, Scotland and Wales).

England? And then what? Argentina? Reopen? Diplomacy? Relationship. ?

Britain and Argentina re-established diplomatic relations.

Extended data:

American English originated from Elizabethan English, and its history is closely related to the history of American immigration, dating back more than 300 years. 1607, the first colonists, including John Smith, crossed the Atlantic Ocean in three big ships and established Jamestown at the mouth of James River in Virginia. ?

Soon after, 1620, Puritans from Norfolk and Suffolk in the east of England arrived in Plymouth in the southeast of Massachusetts on the ship "Mayflower" and established a colony. At that time, Britain was in the period of Elizabeth I, and it was in the early stage of modern English from the perspective of English development history.

Among the first pilgrims who moved to New England, 100 was a graduate of Oxford University and Cambridge University. They brought Elizabethan English to the New World of North America and became the starting point of American English. Since then, both countries have spoken Elizabethan English. Therefore, there is no significant difference between American English and British English for a long time.

As early as the British colonial period, British immigrants in the United States kept close contact with their hometown at first, and their language changed with the change of their mother tongue English, but with the passage of time, an English different from their mother tongue English was also produced in the British colonies in the United States.