Dear earlier people of the thread, Both spellings of 'colour' are correct, however one country spells it 'more pure'. Think of Spanish, many people from different countries all speak a version of it, and are usually able to communicate with each other, however some parts have changed. An example is that a cuban usually does not pronounce all the vowels of a word fully, while a person from somewhere like Spain would. Does it so everyone who speaks Cuban is saying everything incorrectly? No, it just means that one nation's dialect was changed from its original. Therefore both spellings are correct, however one is specifically for one country, while the other is for another. While they may be regarded as speaking the same language, they are truly speaking different dialects. Use the languages spoken over many different countries not as 1 language, however the basis of the language. Also, if you think that British English is superior to American English, and their English has changed over time, why are we not using 'Old English' terms? Since obviously that would be even more pure than British English, which is what you people are basing correctness on. So in the end, everyone is spelling it and speaking it correctly.
"Dear people of this thread." I feel like ive earned a new citizenship or something :lol: Thanks, Narwhal
This is magic or the devil work I have seen this dress in both color blue and black and white n gold when I first saw it as blue and black I never thought blue could turn white until the picture I have in my msg change color I'm still shaking in shock.