The as yet unanswered queries from Itasan on this thread:
A) ball park = a place where baseball is played
This seems to be AmE. Is there a British equivalent?
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B) LDCE ball game
1. AmE a game of baseball, football, or BASKETBALL
2. BrE any game played with a ball
What are the British equivalents for 1 and 2 respectively?
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C) balky
Does it mean 'hard to handle' and is it AmE?
If so, what is the British equivalent?
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D) 'Back country' is said to be AmE and AusE.
I wonder what is the British equivalent.
Here goes:
A) If someone were to build a 'ball park' in the UK, I suppose it might indeed end up being called a ball park; then again, maybe 'baseball field' or 'baseball ground' would become all the rage (latter perhaps implies more stadium-like place, with stands etc, though).
B) The BrE equivalents are again implicit if not explicit in the definitions; as for 2), we don't usually say 'ball game also played with a racquet...' but the name of the sport concerned e.g. tennis (as we indeed also do for 1), hence the 'baseball, football, or BASKETBALL').
C) Didn't have a clue what this meant until I wondered if it might be related to 'to baulk' (AmE usu. to balk) - but that's probably just folk etymology speaking! As for the adjective, there are many ways we could describe '(of a person or machine) refusing or failing to do what you want them to do' (OALD7 online), not all of them printable ('This *beep* *beep* *beep* machine!').
D) It's hard to tell if it is used pejoratively or not, or the "scale" being envisaged. Try looking in e.g. the Oxford range of thesauri at 'country' or 'wilderness' (I'll install my CD ROM again soon and paste something maybe). Again, there is quite a range of terms (especially the pejorative ones!).
As I keep saying, there is often no 1-to-1 "translation" available, hence the "vague" definitions where no exact single equivalent is given.