the punctuation usage is definitely an Americanism
According to various online sources, the first written usage of “period” to mean “dot at the end of a sentence” was in 1609. I can’t find mention of a source, but I find it hard to believe it’s American. I’ve been unable to find an origin for “full stop”—some sites try to link it to the telegraph, but inconsistently mention that “full stop” was not used instead of “stop” since it would cost more.
ETA: found the 1609 reference. John Davies) - poem here—grep for “but thy nailes”
Well, a number of modern-day Americanisms aren’t American in origin, but rather are the result of the usage in question having become obsolete in Britain. Standard examples include “sick” for “ill” and “fall” for “autumn” (“mad” for “angry” might also be one, though I’m not sure).
The same phenomenon occurs in other widely-distributed languages, notably Portuguese, where in some respects Brazilian usage resembles the old-fashioned language of Portugal more than the modern language of Portugal does.
The word “Americanism” seems to imply that it’s some crazy thing the Americans have decided to do, against all sense, as opposed to continuing to use the language in the same fashion it’s been used for hundreds of years. For example, I’ve heard “Authorise is the correct spelling; Americans just spell it ‘authorize’ because they like to be different” despite the British “authorise” being the common spelling for only about a century and the OED still recommending “authorize”.
-ize is something else, but most american spellings (not usage) really are the abrupt decision of Noah Webster. He was a nationalist and the theory that he was trying to create an american identity is poorly-attested but not insane.
According to various online sources, the first written usage of “period” to mean “dot at the end of a sentence” was in 1609. I can’t find mention of a source, but I find it hard to believe it’s American. I’ve been unable to find an origin for “full stop”—some sites try to link it to the telegraph, but inconsistently mention that “full stop” was not used instead of “stop” since it would cost more.
ETA: found the 1609 reference. John Davies) - poem here—grep for “but thy nailes”
Well, a number of modern-day Americanisms aren’t American in origin, but rather are the result of the usage in question having become obsolete in Britain. Standard examples include “sick” for “ill” and “fall” for “autumn” (“mad” for “angry” might also be one, though I’m not sure).
The same phenomenon occurs in other widely-distributed languages, notably Portuguese, where in some respects Brazilian usage resembles the old-fashioned language of Portugal more than the modern language of Portugal does.
The word “Americanism” seems to imply that it’s some crazy thing the Americans have decided to do, against all sense, as opposed to continuing to use the language in the same fashion it’s been used for hundreds of years. For example, I’ve heard “Authorise is the correct spelling; Americans just spell it ‘authorize’ because they like to be different” despite the British “authorise” being the common spelling for only about a century and the OED still recommending “authorize”.
-ize is something else, but most american spellings (not usage) really are the abrupt decision of Noah Webster. He was a nationalist and the theory that he was trying to create an american identity is poorly-attested but not insane.