Date: Tue, 16 Jan 1996 11:27:07 +0000
From: "C.M.Thomas" EGP95CMT[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]SHEFFIELD.AC.UK
Subject: Bank machines
Bill King writes:
Ca. 1986 we were asked what we called ATMs in the US. At the time we
just called them "bank machines," not having anything better. ATM
was not current usage in NYC, where we lived, at that time. The person
asking us, who was working on a national textbook for English, was
quite stressed.
So, when did "automatic teller" come into use? This certainly sounds like
a contrivance on the part of the bank coined in an effort to personalize
something that many customers were unsure of. Apparently they still are.
A current poll shows that 55% (? -- but it was very high) of the banking
public has not used an ATM.
In England (I know this is the American dialect society, but what
the hell) I have never heard anyone refer to bank machines as "ATM"s,
although I understood the abbreviation when I read it. They are most
commonly, in my experience, referred to as "cash machines" or "cash
points", or as the "hole in the wall". I think this latter term may be
dialectal (Lancashire), although I am not entirely sure, and people
from my area would pronounce it "'ole i' t'wall". ( I hope you
understand my attempt to represent it phonetically without an IPAfont at
hand!) Are any of these terms (especially the latter) used in America
(or other parts of England, if there's any other British
subscribers)?
Charlotte Thomas EGP95CMT[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]Sheffield.ac.uk
Snail mail:
CECTAL
Dept. of English Language and Linguistics
University of Sheffield
Sheffield
UK