As unique as the country is the language, the American English! A curious mix it is. In a way, it carries the remnants of the Restoration era old seventeenth century English of the Pilgrim Fathers. Seasoned it is with all the advances, material, technological, not to forget the mix-in of n by other European immigrants, and the Black and the Hispanic inputs.
It has its own grammatical rules. It need not follow the prim n proper stuff, the stiff upper lip Brit English. An easy to understand n remember example could be the 'do support' for negation and/or question formation. Ask an American "Have a light?" He/she might think that you are too formal. MUCH WORSE, you would be corrected with the 'do support'. The American version of a question in case you want a lighter would be "Do you have a lighter?"
A unique feature of American English is that simplifies spellings. "Metre" becomes "meter", for instance. "Colour" changes to "color". All "-ise" endings convert in to the "-ize", and thus become internet friendly.
Vocabulary wise, it chooses to be quirkily, uniquely American. An example or two can be lorry (not truck), gas ( for petrol), gas station (for petrol pump), elevator (for lift), and so on.
Unusual is its pronunciation. "Awesome" becomes "aaasum", for instance. "Aaaful", right? Aamerikans drawl a lot, too. The "r" and the "d" that emerge as connectors are unique, too.
In brief, be Aamerikan, speak Aamerikan!
Pratima@ It could be argued that the vast difference between the spoken, the pop, the slangy and the literary/the high culture varieties of language as varied usage is a typically American phenomenon, of course, very soon exported all over the rest of the world.
Quote of the day: "England and America are two countries separated by the same language." So opined George Bernard Shaw.
Word of the day: slang The slang is the highly informal vocabulary used in casual conversation that falls outside standard, conventional language ambit. It is constantly evolving, often is specific to certain age groups, subcultures, or regions, and is primarily used to build group identity. It expresses emotions colorfully.