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shuyu_lee
nought and zero
I was told British people like using "zero", while Americans tend to use "nought". Is that the real case?
Nov 10, 2011 10:39 AM
Answers · 8
Actually, Americans never use "naught". I see it in books written a hundred years ago, but you would never here it now. They use "zero" or say "oh", like the letter 'o', if they are giving phone numbers.
The British, at least the sports announcers, will say "nil" in giving scores - "Britain defeated France two to nil" I honestly don't remember how often it is used in normal conversation. Can of my British friends enlighten me on this?
[Note: David Buckingham just did]
November 10, 2011
I'm English and I personally say either 'naught' or 'zero'. We also say 'nill' as well, but not when reading out a number, only when the whole number is 0.
November 10, 2011
It's the other way round. The British use "nought" and the Americans use "zero".
November 10, 2011
Nought is another way of saying zero
November 10, 2011
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shuyu_lee
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English
Learning Language
English
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