Why is Security "Center" spelt this way for UK users?

C

cquirke (MVP Windows shell/user)

I'm not dogmatic about this, BTW; I'm rather pointing out a potential
downside to the language fragmentation effect.
[/QUOTE]
...since MS is in the US, they do it the US way. If your copy is
setup as a UK version then I can see your question

I'd assumed Mac (the first poster in this reply) was using the UK
edition. I wouldn't expect "centre" in the US edition.
and that would come down to 'that seems strange'

Just as you're a wee bit heated about keeping US English in the face
of "we invented the language and it should be like *this* " pressure,
so you have to accept that other regional dialects resent an
Americanization of their language from current realities.

MS accepts this, and has gone to some lengths to support various
languages and regional norms. It's in this context that Mac and I
were musing on why MS chose to spell "center" as such, rather than
"centre", in what I presumed was the UK edition.

Recently I read Wikipedia's style guide and other pages on language
issues, and the impression I came away with was that these norms are
changing within the UK - prolly dating back to a BBC policy shift from
a centralized "Queen's English" to embracing regionalized accents.

IOW I'm not certain UK folks still use "centre" rather than "center".

I'm neither in the US nor UK (nor in MS, for that matter), and what I
use tends to be what is shortest - I stop short of txt spk, but am
happy to use contractions such as tho, thru, color, prolly etc.
especially if it keeps my bullet points from breaking across lines
;-)

In particular, I use "program" for code and "programme" for project or
broadcast, e.g. "I watched a programme on the TV yesterday about
Microsoft's new programme of program development".


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