English spelling

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Image:Mergefrom.gif It has been suggested that Letter-sound pairs in English be merged into this article or section. ([[{{{2|: talk:English_spelling}}}|Discuss]])

English spelling (or orthography), although largely phonemic, has more complicated rules than many other spelling systems used by languages written in alphabetic scripts and contains many inconsistencies between spelling and pronunciation, necessitating rote learning for anyone learning to read or write English.

Throughout the history of the English language, these inconsistencies have gradually increased in number. There are a number of contributing factors. First, gradual changes in pronunciation, such as the Great Vowel Shift, account for many irregularities. Second, relatively recent loan words from other languages generally carry their original spellings, which are often not phonetic in English. Inconsistencies in the Romanization of languages using alphabets derived from the Latin alphabet (e.g., Chinese) has further complicated this problem. Third, some prescriptionists have had partial success in their attempts to normalize the English language, forcing a change in spelling but not in pronunciation.

Contents

History of the English spelling system

The regular spelling system of Old English was swept away by the Norman Conquest, and English itself was eclipsed by French for three centuries, eventually emerging with its spelling much influenced by French. English had also borrowed large numbers of words from French, which for reasons of prestige and familiarity kept their French spellings. The spelling of Middle English, such as in the writings of Geoffrey Chaucer, is very irregular and inconsistent, with the same word being spelled differently, sometimes even in the same sentence.

The pronunciation Template:IPA (normally spelled u) of written o in son, love, come, etc. is due to Norman spelling conventions prohibiting writing of u before v, m, n due to the graphical confusion that would result. (v, u, n were identically written with two minims in Norman handwriting; w was written as two u letters; m was written with three minims, hence mm looked like vun, nvu, uvu, etc.) Similarly, spelling conventions also prohibited final v. Hence the identical spellings of the three different vowel sounds in love, grove and prove are due to ambiguity in the Middle English spelling system, not sound change.

There was also a series of linguistic sound changes towards the end of this period, including the Great Vowel Shift, which resulted in "igh" in "night" changing from a pure vowel followed by a palatal/velar fricative to a diphthong. These changes for the most part did not detract from the rule-governed nature of the spelling system; but in some cases they introduced confusing inconsistencies, like the well-known example of the many pronunciations of "ough" (rough, through, though, trough, plough, etc.). Most of these changes happened before the arrival of printing in England. However, the arrival of the printing press merely froze the current system, rather than providing the impetus for a realignment of spelling with pronunciation. Furthermore, it introduced further inconsistencies, partly because of the use of typesetters trained abroad, particularly in the Low Countries.

By the time dictionaries were introduced in the mid 1600s, the spelling system of English started to stabilise, and by the 1800s, most words had set spellings.

Irregularities in the English spelling system

The English spelling system is one of the most irregular spelling systems in current use. Although French presents a similar degree of difficulty when encoding (writing), English is more difficult when decoding (reading). English has never had any formal regulating authority, like the Spanish Real Academia Española, Italian Accademia della Crusca or the French Académie française, so attempts to regularize or reform the language, including spelling reform, have usually met with failure.

The only significant exceptions were the reforms of Noah Webster which resulted in many of the differences between British and American spelling, such as center/centre, and dialog/dialogue. (Other differences, such as -ize/-ise in realize/realise etc, came about separately.)

Besides the quirks the English spelling system has inherited from its past, there are other idiosyncrasies in spelling that make it tricky to learn. English contains 24 separate consonant phonemes and, depending on dialect, anywhere from fourteen to twenty vowels. However, there are only 26 letters in the modern English alphabet, so there cannot be a one-to-one correspondence between letters and sounds. Many sounds are spelled using different letters or multiple letters, and for those words whose pronunciation is predictable from the spelling, the sounds denoted by the letters depend on the surrounding letters. For example, the digraph "th" represents two different sounds (the voiced interdental fricative and the voiceless interdental fricative) (see Pronunciation of English th), and the voiceless alveolar fricative can be represented by the letters "s" and "c".

There was also a period when the spellings of words were altered in what is now regarded as a misguided attempt to make them conform to what were perceived to be the etymological origins of the words. For example, the letter "b" was added to "debt" in an attempt to link it to the Latin debitum, and the letter "s" in "island" is a misplaced attempt to link it to Latin insula instead of the Norse word igland, which is the true origin of the English word. The letter "p" in "ptarmigan" has no etymological justification whatsoever.

Furthermore, in most recent loanwords, English makes no attempt to Anglicise the spellings of these words, and preserves the foreign spellings, even when they employ exotic conventions, like the Polish "cz" in "Czech" or the Old Norse "fj" in "fjord". In fact, instead of loans being respelled to conform to English spelling standards, sometimes the pronunciation changes as a result of pressure from the spelling. One example of this is the word "ski", which was adopted from Norwegian in the mid-18th century, although it didn't become common until 1900. It used to be pronounced "shee", which is similar to the Norwegian pronunciation, but the increasing popularity of the sport after the middle of the 20th century helped the "sk" pronunciation replace it.

The spelling of English continues to evolve. Many loanwords come from languages where the pronunciation of vowels corresponds to the way they were pronounced in Old English, which is similar to the Italian or Spanish pronunciation of the vowels, and is the value the vowel symbols [a], [e], [i], [o], and [u] have in the International Phonetic Alphabet. As a result, there is a somewhat regular system of pronouncing "foreign" words in English, and some borrowed words have had their spelling changed to conform to this system. For example, Hindu used to be spelled "Hindoo", and the name "Maria" used to be pronounced like the name "Mariah", but was changed to conform to this system. It has been argued that this influence probably started with the introduction of many Italian words into English during the Renaissance, in fields like music, from which come the words "andante", "viola", "forte", etc.

Commercial advertisers have also had an effect on English spelling. In attempts to differentiate their products from others, they introduce new or simplified spellings like "lite" instead of "light", "thru" instead of "through", "smokey" instead of "smoky" (for "smokey bacon" flavour crisps), and "rucsac" instead of "rucksack". The spellings of personal names have also been a source of spelling innovations: affectionate versions of women's names that sound the same as men's names have been spelled differently: Nikki and Nicky, Toni and Tony, Jo and Joe.

Many simplifications and abbreviations are made in Instant Messaging or Chatting, for the sake of speed of messaging - e.g. "night" can be spelled as "nite" and "later" as "l8r".

As examples of the idiosyncratic nature of English spelling, the combination "ou" can be pronounced in at least eleven different ways: "famous", "journey", "cough", "dough", "bought", "loud", "tough", "should", "you", "flour", "tour"; and the vowel sound in "me" can be spelt in at least eleven different ways: "paediatric", "me", "seat", "seem", "ceiling", "people", "chimney", "machine", "siege", "phoenix", "lazy". (These examples assume a more-or-less standard non-regional British English accent. Other accents will vary.)

The state of English spelling

It has been shown that regular alphabetic spelling systems make languages easier to learn. Indeed, the concept of learning "spelling" seems very strange to literate speakers of languages such as Finnish or Spanish, as those languages' spelling systems are extremely regular. This is also the case with several abugida alphabets, such as Devanagari, used to write many languages of North India. Vietnamese used to be written exclusively using Chinese characters, so that becoming literate in Vietnamese required years of study, and as a result, very few people were literate. However, after the introduction of a modified form of the Latin alphabet for writing Vietnamese, the writing system could be mastered by a native speaker with only a few hours or days of study, and literacy in Vietnamese is much more widespread now. English, it seems, is somewhere in between: its spelling system is highly irregular, but it is regular to some degree and mastery only requires knowledge of the 26 letters of the alphabet, whereas mastering written Chinese or Japanese is much more difficult, requiring the memorization of thousands of different characters. Studies have shown that dyslexia occurs more often (or at least is more noticeable) among speakers of languages such as English whose orthography differs heavily from the phonology than speakers of languages where the letter-sound correspondence is more regular.

Spelling patterns

Sound to spelling correspondences

The following table shows for each sound, the various spelling patterns used to denote it. The symbol "•" stands for an intervening consonant. The letter sequences are in order of frequency with the most common first. Some of these patterns are very rare or unique, such as 'au' for the ah sound in laugh.

Consonants
IPA spelling example
Template:IPA p, pp, ph, pe pill, happy, Phuket, tape
Template:IPA b, bb, bh, be bit, rabbit, Bhutan, tribe
Template:IPA t, tt, ed, pt, th, ct, te ten, bitter, topped, ptomaine, thyme, ctenoid, hate
Template:IPA d, dd, ed, dh, de dive, ladder, failed, dharma, made
Template:IPA g, gg, gue, gh, gu go, stagger, catalogue, ghost, guilt
Template:IPA c, k, ck, ch, cc, qu, q, cq, cu, que, kk, kh, ke cat, key, tack, chord, account, liquor, Iraq, acquaint, biscuit, mosque, trekker, khan, make
Template:IPA m, mm, mb, mn, mh, me mine, hammer, climb, hymn, mho, lame
Template:IPA n, nn, kn, gn, pn, nh, cn, ne, mn nice, funny, knee, gnome, pneumonia, piranha, cnidarian, vane, mnemonic
Template:IPA ng, n, ngue, ngh sing, link, tongue, Singh
Template:IPA r, rr, wr, rh, rrh, re ray, parrot, wrong, rhyme, diarrhea, more
Template:IPA f, ph, ff, gh, pph, u fine, physical, off, laugh, sapphire, BR lieutenant
Template:IPA v, f, ve vine, of, have
Template:IPA th, chth, phth thin, chthonic, phthisis
Template:IPA th, the them, breathe
Template:IPA s, c, ss, sc, st, ps, sch, cc, se, ce song, city, mess, scene, listen, psychology, schism, flaccid, horse, juice
Template:IPA s, z, x, zz, ss, ze has, zoo, xylophone, fuzz, scissors, breeze
Template:IPA sh, ti, ci, ssi, si, ss, ch, s, sci, ce, sch, sc shin, nation, special, mission, expansion, tissue, machine, sugar, conscience, ocean, schist, crescendo
Template:IPA si, s, g, z, j, zh, ti division, leisure, genre, seizure, jeté, Zhytomyr, equation
Template:IPA ch, t, tch, ti, c, cz, tsch chin, nature, batch, mention, cello, Czech, Deutschmark
Template:IPA g, j, dg, d, di, gi, ge, dj, gg magic, jump, ledger, graduate, soldier, Belgian, dungeon, Djibouti, suggest
Template:IPA h, wh, j he, whom, fajita
Template:IPA y, i, j yes, onion, hallelujah
Template:IPA l, ll, lh, le line, hall, Lhasa, rule
Template:IPA w, u, o, ou we, queen, choir, Ouija board
Template:IPA wh wheel
Vowels
IPA spelling example
Template:IPA e, y, ee, ea, e•e, i•e, ie, ei, ei•e, ey, ae, ay, oe, eo, is, eip, ie▪e, i, ea▪e, it, eigh, ois be, city, bee, beach, cede, machine, field, deceit, deceive, key, Caesar, quay, amoeba, people, debris, receipt, believe, ski, leave, esprit, Raleigh, chamois
Template:IPA i, i•e, a•e, y, ie, ui, ei, ee, e, ia, u, o, u▪e, eig, ie•e bit, give, damage, myth, mischief, build, counterfeit, been, pretty, carriage, busy, women, minute, sovereign, sieve
Template:IPA oo, u, o, u•e, ou, ew, ue, o•e, ui, eu, oe, ough, wo, ioux, ieu, ault, oup tool, luminous, who, flute, soup, jewel, true, lose, fruit, maneuver, canoe, through, two, Sioux, US lieutenant, Sault Sainte Marie, coup
Template:IPA u, oo, ou, o, w full, look, should, wolf, cwm
Template:IPA a, a•e, ai, ay, eigh, ea, ei, ey, au, et, er, ee, aigh, ie, eig, eg paper, rate, rain, pay, eight, steak, veil, obey, gauge, ballet, dossier, matinee, straight, US lingerie, reign, thegn
Template:IPA a, e, o, u, ai, ou, eig, y, ah, ough another, anthem, awesome, atrium, mountain, callous, foreign, beryl, Messiah, BR borough
Template:IPA o, o•e, oa, ow, ou, oe, oo, eau, oh, ew, au, aoh, ough so, bone, boat, know, soul, foe, brooch, beau, oh, sew, mauve, pharoah, furlough
Template:IPA e, ea, a, ai, ie, eo, u, ae, ay, ei, ue, eb, eg met, weather, many, said, friend, jeopardy, bury, aesthetic, says, heifer, guess, debt, phlegm
Template:IPA a, au, ai, a▪e, al, ag, ach hand, laugh, plaid, have, salmon, diaphragm, drachm
Template:IPA u, o, ou, o•e, oo, oe sun, son, touch, come, flood, does
Template:IPA a, au, aw, ough, augh, oa, al, uo fall, author, jaw, bought, caught, broad, walk, BR fluorine
Template:IPA o, a, eau, ach lock, watch, bureaucracy, yacht
Template:IPA i•e, i, y, igh, ie, ei, eigh, uy, ai, ey, ye, eye, y▪e, ae, ais, is, ig, ic, ay fine, Christ, try, high, tie, eidos, height, buy, ailurophobia, geyser, dye, eye, type, maestro, aisle, isle, sign, indict, tayra
Template:IPA ar, er, ear, a•e car, sergeant, heart, are
Template:IPA er, ar, ere, are, aire, eir, air stationery, stationary, where, ware, millionaire, heir, hair
Template:IPA oi, oy, aw, uoy oy•e foil, toy, lawyer, buoy, gargoyle
Template:IPA ou, ow, ough, au out, now, bough, tau
Template:IPA er, or, ur, ir, yr, our, ear, err, eur, yrrh, ar, oeu, olo fern, worst, turn, thirst, myrtle, courage, earth, err, amateur, myrrh, grammar, hors d'oeuvre, colonel
Template:IPA u, u•e, eu, ue, iew, eau, ieu, ueue, ui, ewe, ew music, use, feud, cue, view, beautiful, adieu, queue, nuisance, ewe, few

Spelling to sound correspondences

Notes:

  • The dash has 2 different meanings. A dash after the letter indicates that it must be at the beginning of a syllable, eg j- in jumper and ajar. A dash before the letter indicates that it cannot be at the beginning of a word, eg -ck in sick and ticket.
  • More general rules take precedence over more specific ones, eg 'c- before e, i or y' takes precedence over 'c'.
  • Where the letter combination is described as 'word-final', inflectional suffixes may be added without changing the pronunciation, eg catalogues.
  • The dialect used is RP.
  • Isolated foreign borrowings are excluded.
Combinations of consonant and vowel letters
Spelling Major value (IPA) Examples of major value Minor value (IPA) Examples or minor value Exceptions
qu- Template:IPA queen, quick Template:IPA liquor, mosquito
-cqu Template:IPA acquaint, acquire
unstressed ex- before a vowel Template:IPA exist, examine
unstressed ci- before a vowel Template:IPA special, gracious
unstressed sci- before a vowel Template:IPA conscience
unstressed -si before a vowel Template:IPA expansion Template:IPA division, illusion
unstressed -ssi before a vowel Template:IPA mission
unstressed -ti before a vowel Template:IPA nation, ambitious
unstressed -ture Template:IPA nature, picture
unstressed -sure Template:IPA leisure, treasure
unstressed -zure Template:IPA seizure
unstressed -ften Template:IPA soften, often
unstressed -sten Template:IPA listen, fasten
unstressed -stle Template:IPA whistle, rustle
word-final -le after a consonant Template:IPA little, table
word-final -re after a consonant Template:IPA metre, fibre
word-final -ce Template:IPA face, prince
word-final -ngue Template:IPA tongue
word-final -gue Template:IPA catalogue, plague, colleague
word-final -que Template:IPA mosque, bisque
word-final -ed morpheme after /t/ or /d/ Template:IPA waited
word-final -ed morpheme after a voiceless sound Template:IPA topped
word-final -ed morpheme after a voiced sound Template:IPA failed, ordered
word-final -es morpheme Template:IPA washes, boxes
Consonants
Spelling Major value (IPA) Examples of major value Minor value (IPA) Examples of minor value Exceptions
b, -bb Template:IPA bit, rabbit
c- before e, i or y Template:IPA centre, city, cyst, face, prince Template:IPA cello
c, -cc Template:IPA cat, account
ch Template:IPA chin Template:IPA chord, archaic Template:IPA machine
-ck Template:IPA tack, ticket
ct- Template:IPA ctenoid
d, -dd Template:IPA dive, ladder Template:IPA graduate
-dg Template:IPA ledger
f, -ff Template:IPA fine, off Template:IPA of
g- before e, i or y Template:IPA gentle, magic, gyrate, page Template:IPA get, give
g, -gg Template:IPA go, stagger
gh- Template:IPA ghost, ghastly
-gh dough, high Template:IPA laugh, enough
-ght Template:IPA right, daughter, bought
gn- Template:IPA gnome, gnaw
h- after ex exhibit, exhaust
h- Template:IPA he, alcohol ∅ vehicle
j- Template:IPA jump, ajar
k Template:IPA key, bake
kn- Template:IPA knee, knock
l, -ll Template:IPA line, hall
m, -mm Template:IPA mine, hammer
-mb Template:IPA climb, plumber
mn- Template:IPA mnemonic
-mn Template:IPA hymn, autumn
-n before k Template:IPA link, plonk
n, -nn Template:IPA nice, funny
-ng Template:IPA sing, longing Template:IPA England, finger, stronger
p, -pp Template:IPA pill, happy
ph Template:IPA physical, photograph
pn- Template:IPA pneumonia, pneumatic
ps- Template:IPA psychology, psychic
pt- Template:IPA ptomaine
q Template:IPA Iraq
r, -rr Template:IPA ray, parrot
rh, -rrh Template:IPA rhyme, diarrhoea
-s- between vowels Template:IPA rose, prison Template:IPA house, base
word-final -s morpheme after a voiceless sound Template:IPA pets, shops
word-final -s morpheme after a voiced sound Template:IPA beds, magazines
s, -ss Template:IPA song, ask, message Template:IPA scissors, dessert, dissolve Template:IPA sugar, tissue
sc- before e, i or y Template:IPA scene, scissors, scythe Template:IPA sceptic
sch- Template:IPA school Template:IPA schist, schedule Template:IPA schism
sh Template:IPA shin
t, -tt Template:IPA ten, bitter
-tch Template:IPA batch, kitchen
th Template:IPA or Template:IPA thin, them Template:IPA thyme, Thames
v Template:IPA vine
w- Template:IPA we
wh- before o Template:IPA who, whole
wh- Template:IPA (Template:IPA in dialects where this phoneme exists) wheel
wr- Template:IPA wrong
x- Template:IPA xylophone
-x Template:IPA box
y- Template:IPA yes
z, -zz Template:IPA zoo, fuzz


See also

External links