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DEFINE?
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I think it must mainly be an accent thing. Normal written English went with the colonists with the English spelling, which then developed rather different pronunciation (and later somewhat different spelling). However, words such as this are not normally written, so when they did eventually write them, I think they just wrote what they now said -- they could hardly ask their relatives in Britain about it: "Dear Great-uncle, my little brother wants to know what is the proper spelling of...."
I suspect the same thing has happened with mum/mom. When an American says mom it sounds very similar to a Brit saying mum, with a similar long indeterminate-vowel sound (of course leaving aside Brits who say mam).
Which American word is that Alej? I've always said ass and so have millions of Brits. As Quizmonster points out the word with this meaning predates America (as we know it). There are many different accents in Britain and there are quite a few words that are pronounced differently from place to place
I'm glad you think I'm cool but it's not something my sons call me lol.
I've noticed this Linda F, most Americans do say MOM not MUM and Canadians MUM.