Similar Posts

Subscribe
Notify of
28 Answers
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
latricolore, UserMod Light

When I was in GB twice during my school, they either didn’t notice me or I forgot.

In my memory, they stand for my US holiday, so I write it like that.
I didn’t become a fan of them.

latricolore, UserMod Light

Thank you for the star! 😊

Therapeutic
1 year ago

The other one I see for the first time.

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  Therapeutic

The other is the British spelling.

dough = dough

Therapeutic
1 year ago
Reply to  adabei

I thought that was the first time I saw the spelling.

Ben918
1 year ago

Donut is the American spelling and for me also the brownish list. Because when I get in touch with it, I just see it written.

Altersweise
1 year ago

I met these pastries in London in 1977 as a doughnut, but it has only been experienced, heard and read in American contexts. That’s why I’d prefer Donut’s spelling and just leave it to Britain in the original.

Ben918
1 year ago
Reply to  Altersweise

That’s exactly how I think:)

touchytt
1 year ago

above all the first term, but differently as good as never.

smileybaum
1 year ago

And donate.

Lieschen951
1 year ago

Always like that.

verreisterNutzer
1 year ago

Donut – 5 simple memorable letters… :))

antnschnobe, UserMod Light

None of them – with me they are called, after Donald Duck – Scmalzkringel 😁

https://www.duckipedia.de/Donald_Duck#Hobbys

Pomophilus
1 year ago

Hello,

I wouldn’t eat them, but if I had to write the word, I would take donut: short, concise, american, and the word origin is already a little worn out. But I don’t think it’s bad with the Schmalzkringel, that’s what we have to thank Erika Fuchs again. It has not only introduced ingenious own word creations, even existing words it has wonderfully incorporated.

https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erika_Fuchs

Helfer780
1 year ago

Of course, Donut, didn’t know the other term yet.

Lg helpers780

Jenal
1 year ago

Who says to Donut Doughnut also says to Berliner Krapfen

Ben918
1 year ago
Reply to  Jenal

I say Donut and Berliner πŸ˜€

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  Jenal

You wouldn’t hear a difference when talking.

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  Jenal

I write “doughnut” and say “crapes”. πŸ˜‰

anonym200886
1 year ago

D🍩nut

Margita1881
1 year ago

The name Doughnut I didn’t know yet.

Ben918
1 year ago
Reply to  Margita1881

Doughnut is the official British spelling. Donut is American, but is recognized by high presence in movies, games, series, or wherever by most people as normal spelling πŸ™‚

Margita1881
1 year ago
Reply to  Ben918

Donut also has a high presence in supermarkets.

Ben918
1 year ago

Yeah, right. In the Edeka, I’ve already seen so finished in a 6 pack that actually called “doughnut”. It is also partly a matter of taste or habit. Anyway, both are right.

OpiPaschulke
1 year ago

That’s what I’m used to.

AstridDerPu
1 year ago

Hello,

I am British (English) and write doughnut. Although – since I do not really like the pastry, I write and eat it relatively rarely. I love Caps – as you say in Bavaria.

AstridThePu

Deichgoettin
1 year ago

No one. Since I don’t even eat things, I don’t need to write them either :-))

Dachssi
1 year ago

So who doughnut writes makes in his life what is wrongπŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚