A shkruani e-maile ose letra në Scouse apo përdorni anglishten standarde?
no
few weeks
yes always
standard english
standard english.
just standard english
standard english because they probably won't be able to understand it.
i shorten words.
scouse
standard english
no
depends
scouse
scouse
as a joke lolol.
scouse is only an accent, not a different language.
standard english lad
it depends on who i'm writing to. if it's a friend, i will use scouse, but if i am writing to a business or someone i don't know, i will use standard english.
no
standard english
i do use a little bit, like, yeah!
no
no
depends
standard english.
english.
standard english
english
it all depends on who the email or letter is for.
both, depending on who i'm writing to, i only use scouse for friends.
i use standard english, with some scouse words.
both
english
english
standard english
bought
it depends on who they're for. i usually type in standard english.
both
bit of both
standard english
sometimes
standard english with a few colloquialisms
depends on who i am sending it to.
sometimes, i use both depending on who it's for.
no.
both
depends if i'm talking to a scouser or not
standard english.
scouse, of course :)
mainly standard english because i try, but sometimes i write some scouse words.
standard english
sometimes, i tend to say "am" instead of "i'm" and "da" instead of "the" and "ya" instead of "you"....and so on.
i use standard english.
scouse
standard english, informal texts to friends may use slang, but that's usual.
i mostly use text talk, which is mostly scouse, but some are in standard english.
no
i write them in scouse.
english
both
scouse (slang)
depends on who i am writing to and what the nature of the text is.
depends on who i'm writing to.
no
a bit of both, it all depends on whether the person is from liverpool.
usually a mixture, but always containing scouse phrases
it depends on who i'm emailing; with friends, i will use general slang, and for professional purposes, i will use full english.
both! if i'm tired like now! i will, but in general, no.