Provides aliases for the Perl built-in special variables. Everything else about the variables and their use remains the same. Be aware, though, that using the English module significantly slows down a program for regular expressions.
Some of the Perl variables match some awk built-in variables. For those
cases, you'll find two English names: a short version (which is the
awk name) and a longer version.  For example, you can use
either $ERRNO (the awk name) or $OS_ERROR to refer to
the Perl variable $!.
Here is the list of variables, and their English alternatives:
| Perl | English | Perl | English | 
|---|---|---|---|
@_ | @ARG | $? | $CHILD_ERROR | 
$_ | $ARG | $! | $OS_ERROR | 
$% | $MATCH | $! | $ERRNO | 
$` | $PREMATCH | $@ | $EVAL_ERROR | 
$' | $POSTMATCH | $$ | $PROCESS_ID | 
$+ | $LAST_PAREN_MATCH | $$ | $PID | 
$. | $INPUT_LINE_NUMBER | $< | $REAL_USER_ID | 
$. | $NR | $< | $UID | 
$/ | $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR | $> | $EFFECTIVE_USER_ID | 
$/ | $RS | $> | $EUID | 
$| | $OUTPUT_AUTOFLUSH | $( | $REAL_GROUP_ID | 
$, | $OUTPUT_FIELD_SEPARATOR | $( | $GID | 
$, | $OFS | $) | $EFFECTIVE_GROUP_ID | 
$\ | $OUTPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR | $) | $EGID | 
$\ | $ORS | $0 | $PROGRAM_NAME | 
$" | $LIST_SEPARATOR | $] | $PERL_VERSION | 
$; | $SUBSCRIPT_SEPARATOR | $^A | $ACCUMULATOR | 
$; | $SUBSEP | $^D | $DEBUGGING | 
$% | $FORMAT_PAGE_NUMBER | $^F | $SYSTEM_FD_MAX | 
$= | $FORMAT_LINES_PER_PAGE | $^I | $INPLACE_EDIT | 
$- | $FORMAT_LINES_LEFT | $^P | $PERLDB | 
$~ | $FORMAT_NAME | $^T | $BASETIME | 
$^ | $FORMAT_TOP_NAME | $^W | $WARNING | 
$: | $FORMAT_LINE_BREAK_CHARACTERS | $^X | $EXECUTABLE_NAME | 
$^L | $FORMAT_LINEFEED | $^O | $OSNAME |