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Most people just call it their phone. Cell isn't common usage, IME.In the US would it be as simple as "Honey, don’t forget your mom’s on the cell?"
Not to nitpick, but not being a native English speaker, I have to ask: Is it correct to use the capital "M" for Mom, rather than just "mom" when it's coupled with a possessive adjective "your""Honey, don't forget your Mom's on the cell," or "Honey, don't forget your Mom's on her cell."
It depends if it's her own phone or if it's some sort of shared phone. Mobile could still be used but cell is far more prevalent.
LOL you're quite right, literally banging away at the keys after a long day. I have a tendency to try and bash away without much thought to the grammar for round one, my aim is to make sure the "feel" of the story is right, then start the process of tidying but you are certainly correct!Not to nitpick, but not being a native English speaker, I have to ask: Is it correct to use the capital "M" for Mom, rather than just "mom" when it's coupled with a possessive adjective "your"
I thought that the correct way would be to say, for example:
My mom is going to the marketplace.
"Mom, buy me an ice cream!"
It's off topic but still, I am always curious about these things.
That's how I'd say it.Honey, don’t forget your mom’s on the phone"
Thanks for responding. it is as it seems, if I said to someone here "your mum's on the cell" they would assume they were likely in a prison and involved in a riot and be on the roof of the prison cellWe might need a little more context?
If the speaker is under the age of 40 (and probably plenty of older people too), they would just say "Your mom's on the phone," and would assume a cellphone as the default situation. Landlines are increasingly unusual, except maybe in an office setting.
But maybe you're saying something different here, like "Your mom has her phone with her today," as if she usually doesn't have her cellphone with her?
Capital M Mom is the same as calling her Laura, it's her name. When you write, "My mom," you're not using her name, you're saying who she is.Not to nitpick, but not being a native English speaker, I have to ask: Is it correct to use the capital "M" for Mom, rather than just "mom" when it's coupled with a possessive adjective "your"
I thought that the correct way would be to say, for example:
My mom is going to the marketplace.
"Mom, buy me an ice cream!"
It's off topic but still, I am always curious about these things.
You wrote yours correctly, it seems. I was quoting pink_silk_glove.LOL you're quite right, literally banging away at the keys after a long day. I have a tendency to try and bash away without much thought to the grammar for round one, my aim is to make sure the "feel" of the story is right, then start the process of tidying but you are certainly correct!
Yeah, I thought so, thanks. I know that grammar can be tricky even for native English speakers but PSG never gave me a reason to doubt her grammar skills so... yeah, she shook my confidence for a bit. Mistakes can happen to anyone, of course.Capital M Mom is the same as calling her Laura, it's her name. When you write, "My mom," you're not using her name, you're saying who she is.
"Hey, Mom, could you come over here for a sec?"
My mom walked towards me.
Except in Australia, she'd be my mum, and I'd call her Mum.
When "mom" is not capitalized, it functions as a common noun and requires a determiner or pronoun to specify whose mom is being referred to. For example:Not to nitpick, but not being a native English speaker, I have to ask: Is it correct to use the capital "M" for Mom, rather than just "mom" when it's coupled with a possessive adjective "your"
I thought that the correct way would be to say, for example:
My mom is going to the marketplace.
"Mom, buy me an ice cream!"
It's off topic but still, I am always curious about these things.
Same. I think over the last decade I've only heard/read Yanks saying 'cell' when distinguishing between cellphones and landlines for some reason - like Mom calls so someone assumes she must have reached her office, but she hasn't and is using the cell for once. My mother finally got a mobile which she uses as a portable phone box that doesn't reek of wee, turning it on only to call home and get dad to meet her from a certain train. After a couple years it stopped working. Took me rather a long time to diagnose that she'd simply never needed to charge it in all that time...I have stories where landlines and even pay phones are still mentioned so I have just always used "cell phone" to avoid any confusion. It also shields me from snarky comments by the biology nerds about using only the word "cell".
I would feel cheated if a story occurred in a location other than the U.S., with characters attempting to use words and phrases not native to them or the locale. If these are Americans visiting the U.K., that would be one thing, but...
Regardless of which noun it is, I don't really understand what you're saying?Hi, after some help from my transatlantic cousins on here.
In the UK, the sentence I would use would be "Honey, don’t forget your mom’s on the mobile"
In the US would it be as simple as "Honey, don’t forget your mom’s on the cell?"
1982, with the release of Firefox, starring Clint Eastwood. Doesn't anybody stay to watch the closing credits to movies anymore?When did we stop calling them portable personal all-purpose communication devices?
Ah, see, I only read the novelisation. That explains that then.1982, with the release of Firefox, starring Clint Eastwood. Doesn't anybody stay to watch the closing credits to movies anymore?