What's the rule for which 'national identity adjective' suffix to use?
What's the rule for which 'national identity adjective' suffix to use?
[-ish] Ireland, Scotland = Irish, Scottish
[-an] Morocco, Germany = Moroccan, German
[-ese] Portugal, China = Portuguese, Chinese
What rule is at play here? 🤔
Cheers!
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The English Language, where the grammar is made up and the rules don't matter.
I can add:
[-er] New Zealander
46 0 ReplyNew Zealand -> Kiwi.
14 0 ReplyOnly in the same way Australia -> Aussie, or England -> pom. Colloquial terms
9 0 ReplyWhen does a colloquial term become a non-colloquial? Usage by government/official contexts?
In August 2022, Minister of Immigration Michael Wood referred to 85,000 holders of recently approved New Zealand 2021 resident visas as "new Kiwis".
1 0 Reply
Or just a different word completely. Dutch.
9 0 ReplyPfft. The Dutch...
5 0 Reply
Odd way to spell Kiwi but you do you pal
5 0 ReplyNew Zealander is the least odd sounding of the lot.
New Zealandish
New Zealandan
New Zealandese?
4 0 ReplyBooo I'ma still say New Zealish
4 0 ReplyNew Zealot
10 0 Replyfor aiur
7 0 ReplyAdun toridas.
3 0 Reply
New Zealander is the least odd sounding of the lot.
New Zealandish
New Zealandan
New Zealandese?
3 0 ReplyNewfoundlander
1 0 Reply