American English (AmE, AE, AmEng, USEng, en-US) is also called American English or American English and is an English group mainly used in the United States. This is the first major language developed outside the UK (Kretzschmar, W.2000). Compared to the mass migration of native English speakers from the UK, Scotland and Ireland to Australia, New Zealand and North America, the spread of English came from the first expatriate.
From the late 16th century to the early 17th century British colonial rule first introduced English to the Americas. Likewise, due to British trade and colonization, the spread of the former British Empire, this language also extends to many other parts of the world and by 1921 the British empire has a population of about 4-5.7 million Occupied. It is a population. During the past 400 years, the language format used in the United States, especially the United States, and the language used in the UK are different in several respects, and the English version currently is sometimes called the American English and the UK. Both differences include pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary (vocabulary), spelling, punctuation, idioms, and forms of dates and numbers.
In the mid 17th century, British introduced English through British colonial rule. Due to the vastness of British rule, it spread to many different places in the world. Over time, English spoken in the United States and the United Kingdom began to diversify at various angles. This encouraged a new language: American English. Before the revolutionary war of 1776 and autonomy of the United States, the change between the United States and Britain was almost the same. Both are Rotikaks, that is speakers claim that the letter of R is difficult. Since 1776 the accent has been separated; however, the change in English in the United States certainly is not as good as the change in accent in the UK. By the end of the eighteenth century, non-English discourse began in the southern part of the UK, especially the upper class, and since then the "glorious" non-discourse discourse was institutionalized and spread in the UK. But most Americans' choice is still lotion