Bar (except for)

Status
Not open for further replies.

Johnyxxx

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2014
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Czech
Home Country
Czech Republic
Current Location
Czech Republic
Hi,

Is bar (except for) still used in modern English?

Thanks.
 
Re: Bar

I see it as a BrE usage, except for the fixed phrase bar none​ which is reasonably common in AmE.
 
Re: Bar

It is, in 'bar one' or, 'bar none'.


Other than that, I'd say not really.
 
Re: Bar

I am asking because I have seen it only in an older literature.

Chains are useless; nothing keeps a man still. Bar anaesthesia. And anaesthesia is the
one thing barred. (Aleister Crowley, The Soul-Hunter, 1908)

Angela had always admitted, but distinctly preferable to nothing. For those few clippings were all that remained to her of the one episode that had relieved three decades and a half of drudgery—the only piece of ‘luck’ or colour (bar the legacy) that she had known. (Not There, J. Metcalfe, 1948)

Thanks for your replies.
 
Re: Bar

It is, in 'bar one' or, 'bar none'.


Other than that, I'd say not really.

The Economist​ uses it pretty often. I don't suppose their usage is representative of British usage as a whole, though.
 
Re: Bar

I am asking because I have seen it only in an older literature.

Chains are useless; nothing keeps a man still. Bar anaesthesia. And anaesthesia is the
one thing barred. (Aleister Crowley, The Soul-Hunter, 1908)

This Crowley quote sounds dated to me. It is used in modern BrE, but not that much, and I agree that barring is more common.
 
Re: Bar

I also want to firmly agree that "bar none" is a rather common use.
 
Re: Bar

Yes, it's still used fairly commonly -- I've just seen it in a blog I was reading.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Ask a Teacher

If you have a question about the English language and would like to ask one of our many English teachers and language experts, please click the button below to let us know:

(Requires Registration)
Back
Top