I like spelling it grey because it looks better
I’ve always thought of it as “grEy” is English and “grAy” is American.
Not wrong. For me, Grey is a colour, Gray is an American surname.
Except for Grey’s Anatomy. The Americans had to concede with that one because of the book, but I’m sure Americans thought it was exotic. That’s why they called the other show House and not Condo. Marketability.
I thought House was because it sounds like “home” and that sounds like Holmes, and the character/show of House is based on the Sherlock Holmes stories.
It’s actually a reference to Brick House, the lyrics:
"Ow, she’s a brick house
She’s mighty-mighty, just lettin’ it all hang out. She’s a brick house. That lady’s stacked and that’s a fact. Ain’t holding nothing back"
Referring to the demeanor of Dr.House and how he lets it all hang out, and holds nothing back.
:P
It’s actually called house because he breaks into people’s houses
Ah, that makes much more sense. TIL
Sounds more like a reference to Cuddy.
This is how I think of it as well. I spell the color with an e, and Gray is a name in my extended family.
Grey is colour and gray is color
🧐
I think of grey as having a slight blue tinge, like grey skies
Versus gray is made of only (e.g.) black and white paint.
But I know there’s no reason for that distinction and ultimately they’re interchangeable.
Mostly I’m just curious how I got this idea of a slightly bluer grey and if anyone else has a similar mental association.
For me it’s always been Grey: cool (blue/black tones) Gray: warm (brown/orange tones)
Interesting! There is a linguistic phenomenon that synonyms differentiate their meanings because we tend to assume that different words have different meanings. This happens both on the individual and collective level. Funny that it even works for different spellings in your case! Maybe you encountered the one in a specific context and since than associate it
I prefer spelling it with an ‘e’ so I always do that (probably because my name has two common spellings, one with an A and the other with an E, and mine is the latter).
But if forced to identify which is which color-wise, I’d say “grey” has cool undertones while “gray” has warm undertones. Really no reason to think that, but it’s right in my brain.
Reyali, more like Geigh-ly! Huht huht
Felt this way my whole life about low-saturation blues and also gre/ay… discovered I have something going on in my left eye that doesn’t really see greens all that well. Found this out over a rollicking argument over my favorite gray coat which obv, was actually kinda greenish
I always forget how cute their little island english is with all the extra letters and fun ways they mutate loan words!
Loan words? Dude, you’re loaning the entire language.
Languages are the original open source and will never stop forking right off however enough people form and propagate them, dude
You sound like a candidate for a book I enjoyed: Highly Irregular: Why Tough, Through, and Dough Don’t Rhyme and Other Oddities of the English Language
And Gary is the name of Spongebob’s snail
CSS has solved this issue years ago
It’s okay for them to be wrong.
#666666
Other way around.
One’s an alien, the other is also an alien but spelled differently.
I pronounce the british word as Co-lour-ur
Colauer and armauer.
I frequently confuse the two when I’m not thinking, or my browser has defaulted to the colonial spellchecker.
colonial
This could apply to either spelling.