Khaleej Times

Canadians more polite than Americans on Twitter

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washington — It’s a tired cliche but on Twitter, it rings true: Canadians are more polite than Americans, saying words like “great” and “thank you” more often, a scientific study said on Wednesday. The report in the journal PLOS

ONE, led by three researcher­s at McMaster University, analyzed 37 million tweets from 2015-16.

Canadians were more likely to use words like “great, thanks, good, amazing, happy,” said the findings.

Americans, on the other hand, tended to commonly write words like “hate, love, miss, mad, feel, swear, tired”.

Americans were also far more likely to use emojis than Canadians, like the laughing-while-crying one and the hearts-for-eyes face, and to resort to internet acronyms

like lol and idk.

Other word preference­s showed a “clear prevalence of negative outputs in American tweets over Canadians”, said the report.

“American lexical choices show a clear relative preference for taboo words, including swear words, expletives, and racial slurs.”

The findings came as a surprise to

researcher­s, who noted that other sociologic­al research over the years has shown that Canadians really are not nicer than Americans, despite the commonly cited stereotype.

“The Twitter behaviour we observe doesn’t actually reflect the real underlying personalit­y profile of an average American or Canadian,” said Daniel Schmidtke, coauthor of the study and a post-doctoral researcher at McMaster.

What may be happening, linguists argue, is what they call an “identity constructi­on strategy”.

In other words, Canadians and Americans may create and even reinforce their national character stereotype­s with the words they type on Twitter.

It’s a hypothesis that remains to be proven.

American lexical choices show a clear relative preference for taboo words, including swear words, expletives, and racial slurs

Report

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