Hi teachers,<br/><br/><a class='_ac _lb' lightbox='https://uat-englishforward-forums-backend.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1743061.0_rt97mttn4xpg.png '><img class='_ac _di img-fluid' style='width:390px; height:inherit; background: inherit;' data-delaysrc='https://uat-englishforward-forums-backend.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1743061.0_rt97mttn4xpg.png' src='https://uat-englishforward-forums-backend.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1743061.0_rt97mttn4xpg.png' /></a><br/><br/><i>Moon Florida Beaches: The Best Places to Swim, Play, Eat, and Stay</i><br/><i>Parke Puterbaugh (Author), Alan Bisbort (Author)</i><br/><br/>Is "take a swim" American English? Do British English speakers say "have a swim"?