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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

1025.0. "English Spelling" by NLFDC::LEE () Tue Feb 16 1993 04:04

    I never noticed this 'lack' for English speakers until I came to live
    in the Netherlands and learnt Dutch.

    For Dutch spelling, there is a (small) standard reference work called
    "Het Groene Boekje"(�) ('the little green book'!) which is primarily(�)  
    a list of officially accepted spellings, plus acceptable
    alternatives.

    No space is wasted on meanings, it is primarily a list to indicate how
    to spell words. Because of this saving in space (ie. no meanings) you
    can very quickly look up answers to questions like: is it "contract" or
    "kontrakt" (or are both acceptable) etc.

    These past few weeks I have been doing a lot of writing in English, for
    my own pleasure, and repeatedly ran up against frustrating doubts about
    the correct spelling of certain words.

    To the best of my knowledge, English speakers use DICTIONARIES to find
    out the best or acceptable spellings. I found (in contrast to using "Het
    Groene Boekje"), that this was a pain in two ways:

       1. You had to flip through so many more pages because of all the
          text describing the meanings of the words. Meanings I didn't need
          to be told as I just wanted to know how to spell something. 

       2. (and this is much more painful), many dictionaries do not give
          inflectional information and derived words per se, so unless an
          inflected or derived form of the baseword is itself interesting
          from the point of view of _meaning_, then it was impossible to
          find out the/an acceptable spelling for the form.

          eg. "age" was a listed word, but the 'process of growing old' was
          not listed under or after it, so I was unable to find out whether
          to spell it "aging" or "ageing".

   In the next reply to this note, I'll put some of the words I had doubts
   about to see what others think. Still, a spelling list like the Dutch
   one would be nice. Perhaps it exists and I just don't know about it.

   Please, not ratholes about THE correct spelling of a word. There are
   differences between Americal and British usage, differences between the
   style manuals from one newspaper to another etc. It would just be nice
   to know of the existence of lists of 'acceptable' spellings.           

   Notes:
   (�) : It has an official name, something like: "Woordenlijst van de
         Nederlandse Taal" (literally: 'Wordlist of the Dutch Language'),
         but everybody calls it by its unofficial name.

   (�) : It also lists official and acceptable genders of the words. 

T.RTitleUserPersonal
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1025.1examplesNLFDC::LEETue Feb 16 1993 04:0513
    Most of my problems were to do with inflections of words ending in
    "-e". Examples:

    1. continuing, valuing, intriguing, queuing etc. 

       I'm sure I've seen "valueing" before.

    2. manageable, changeable etc

       It's a bit confusing. What about pagable, stagable.

    Anyone care to try and formulate some rules of thumb ?
1025.2And it works with "manage" too.SMURF::BINDERQui scire uelit ipse debet discereTue Feb 16 1993 06:1810
    Retain the terminal `e' if the final sounded syllable ends in a
    consonant before the `e'.  Thus:
    
    	"page" --> "pageable"
    
    but
    
    	"value" --> "valuing"
    
    Well?
1025.3DATABS::LASHERWorking...Tue Feb 16 1993 07:166
    Re: .1
    
    Usually the "e" is dropped.  But the "e" is kept, in words such as
    "manageable" to keep the "soft" "g" sound.
    
Lew Lasher
1025.4rule of thumb, maybe...PENUTS::DDESMAISONSEvanescent ladle rat rotten hut.Tue Feb 16 1993 07:2013
   >> Retain the terminal `e' if the final sounded syllable ends in a
   >> consonant before the `e'.  Thus:
    
   >> 	"page" --> "pageable"


    If you mean _any_ consonant, then this doesn't always work, e.g.:

        "devise" --> "devisable"    


    Diane
1025.5Yes please, I'll buy one...PAOIS::HILLAn immigrant in ParisTue Feb 16 1993 07:2310
    My cheap and cheerful Collins Paperback English Dictionary has the
    derivative words as well as the root words.
    
    Maybe your cheap and cheerful dictionary was a bit too cheapor a bit
    too cheerful? :-)
    
    Anyway the 'little green book' sounds like a smart idea.  Could you
    prepare one for us please?
    
    Nick
1025.6This may be what you wantRAGMOP::T_PARMENTERHuman. All too human.Tue Feb 16 1993 09:4028
    I have on my desk "The Word Book" which contains "40,000 words spelled
    and divided".  
    
    Under "age" we find 
    
    	"age, aged, ag'ing _or_ age'ing
    
    	"aged _(of the age of)_
    
    	"a'ged _(elderly)_
    
    	"age'ism
    
    	"age'less"
    
    etc.  You'll find these in any bookstore or office supplies store. 
    There are many editions with different numbers of words, but 40,000
    seemed about right to me.
    
    Whenever I look anything up, I make a tick next to the word. 
    "oc-cas'ion" has eight marks next to it.  On the facing page, "oeu'rve"
    pl. oeu'vres" has one mark.
    
    Listings include, words confused with other words, for exampe "offal
    _(waste)_, see _awful_.  There are lots of other features, packed into
    a 3x4-inch book at about $6.
    
    
1025.7VMSMKT::KENAHShedding the homespunTue Feb 16 1993 10:4116
    Rules of thumb in English are not always useful, because English
    absorbs words from everywhere.  
    
    It has two primary roots, Latinate and Germanic, each with its
    idiosyncrasies.  With each primary root, there are variations (Latin,
    French, Spanish, etc. or Old English, German, and so on).  
    
    In addition, English has gleefully added words from every major (and
    many minor) language group; it has also created or redefined words
    whenever needed (and sometimes even when not). 
    
    Because of the breadth of its base, any consistent rule is impossible.
    English is a very rich and variegated language; it also a very
    difficult language to learn and spell correctly.
    
    					andrew
1025.8CALS::DESELMSOpera r�lzTue Feb 16 1993 11:126
    Is there any other language anywhere that does not have a consistent set
    of spelling and pronunciation rules?

    I pity anybody that tries to learn to write or speak English.

    - Jim
1025.9VMSMKT::KENAHShedding the homespunTue Feb 16 1993 13:344
    No language is perfectly consistent -- English is less consistent than
    most since its sources are so diverse .
    
    					andrew
1025.10JIT081::DIAMONDPardon me? Or must I be a criminal?Tue Feb 16 1993 17:4717
    Writing or speaking English is no problem.  Writing AND speaking yield
    the problem.
    
    Meanwhile, a word list doesn't do much good for the English language
    because, as a notable regular has pointed out:
    spelling chequers aren't awl ewe kneed.
    
    And finally, in response to .0, I must point out that most English
    speakers DON'T refer to dictionaries to get correct spellings.
    A few do, but most just write random sequences of letters that
    look like they might be pronounced the same as the desired word.
    
    And post-finally, as a rule of thumb, although a trailing "e" is
    usually dropped when inflecting, it has to be retained when there
    is a soft "g" and a suffix that starts with something other than
    "e" or "i", because the "e" keeps the "g" soft -- you should never
    forget.
1025.11Thank UNLFDC::LEEWed Feb 17 1993 04:0224
   Thanks for all the responses. I shall look out for The Word Book, but 
   I _do_ spend a lot of time in bookshops (not bookstores!), and I haven't
   noticed it before, so perhaps it's more readily available in the US than
   other countries. Could you give me an author or ISBN reference ?

   >> And finally, in response to .0, I must point out that most English
   >> speakers DON'T refer to dictionaries to get correct spellings.
   >> A few do, but most just write random sequences of letters that
   >> look like they might be pronounced the same as the desired word.

   Thank you for this. I burst into a loud guffaw at my terminal when I 
   read it.

    >> And post-finally, as a rule of thumb, although a trailing "e" is
    >> usually dropped when inflecting, it has to be retained when there
    >> is a soft "g" and a suffix that starts with something other than
    >> "e" or "i", because the "e" keeps the "g" soft -- you should never
    >> forget.

   This is the best rule of thumb I've been given yet. I shall henceforth
   apply it diligently and post back any exceptions I come across.

   -Sim.
1025.12SMURF::BINDERQui scire uelit ipse debet discereWed Feb 17 1993 05:5010
    That (probably) all alphabetically-written languages are not
    self-consistent is almost certainly true.  Even Latin, whoch is often
    touted as a prime example of regularity, exhibits some serious
    irregularity, having indeclinable nouns and adjectives as well
    as irregular, deponent, and defective verbs - as well as three known
    pronunciation styles (two dialects of canonical "Church" Latin, the
    Germanic and the Italianate, and the accepted "classical" Roman form). 
    :-)
    
    -dick
1025.13Esperanto?GAVEL::SATOWWed Feb 17 1993 06:078
>    That (probably) all alphabetically-written languages are not
>    self-consistent is almost certainly true.  

Isn't consistency (of spelling, pronunciation, declension, etc.) one of the 
virtues of Esperanto?

Clay

1025.14Spelling Bee?INGOT::ROBERTSWed Feb 17 1993 06:075
    Are there any other languages in which one can have a reasonably
    competitive spelling bee?  Do such things take place in, say, French
    schools?  
    
    ellie  (who has real trouble with French spelling)
1025.15Americans have trouble spelling English tooRAGMOP::T_PARMENTERHuman. All too human.Wed Feb 17 1993 06:2832
    Every language has parts that are easy and parts that are hard. 
    English is almost entirely devoid of inflection of any kind.  In fact,
    the grammar of English is quite stripped down compared to some other
    languages.  The spelling is hard for the reasons adduced.  I would only
    add that importing words from other languages without altering the
    spelling to a phonetic form improves the odds of your being able to
    figure out what an new word means.  The ready absorption of words from
    other languages is one of the glories of English; tough spelling is the
    price we pay.
    
    It is my observation, by the way, that English can deal with
    misspellings (nine ticks next to "misspell" in my Word Book) better
    than most languages, not to mention misconstructions and grammatical
    errors.  I have rarely seen one of those collections of "amusing
    mistakes in English by foreigners" so confused that I couldn't figure
    out what they had been trying to say.  I understand that you can
    compose prose in French that is both grammatically correct and with all
    words used correctly that will still be rejected as "not French".
    
    Practical addendum:
    
    My particular edition of The Word Book was compiled by Kaethe Ellis and
    published by Houghton Mifflin.  It is "based on" the American Heritage
    Dictionary (don't let me get started on that).  Mine was published in
    1976, and the ISBN is 039-524-5214.  "All correspondence and inquiries
    should be directed to Dictionary Division, Houghton Mifflin Company,
    Two Park Street, Boston, MA 02107."
    
    I'd go to the reference section in a bookstore or the "secretarial
    tools" department of a stationery store and ask for "a book called
    something like '50,000 words' or 'spelling dictionary'".  I'm pretty
    sure you'll find something to fit your needs.
1025.16may weePENUTS::DDESMAISONSEvanescent ladle rat rotten hut.Wed Feb 17 1993 06:428
    
   >> ellie  (who has real trouble with French spelling)

	Vraymon, Ellie?  Pork wah?  Keldo mahj.


	Di

1025.17SMURF::BINDERQui scire uelit ipse debet discereWed Feb 17 1993 08:243
    Pork wah?  is that anything like Pork satay?
    
    -dick
1025.18VMSMKT::KENAHShedding the homespunWed Feb 17 1993 08:573
    Nope, you cook Pork Satay in a Pork Wah.
    
    					andrew
1025.19ESGWST::RDAVISNice imagery but a little gruesomeWed Feb 17 1993 11:016
>    ... because the "e" keeps the "g" soft -- you should never
>    forget.
    
    Forget Fergie the geisha girl, together with her geese?  Get out, you
    git!
    
1025.20Pa don aim wa 8^)INGOT::ROBERTSWed Feb 17 1993 12:385
    re .16
    
    Say vray!  
    
    
1025.21JIT081::DIAMONDPardon me? Or must I be a criminal?Wed Feb 17 1993 16:2513
    I even formatted my previous reply to make the word "forget" stand out
    on a line by itself at the end, and it appears that the irony went
    unnoticed.  Sigh.  The "e" keeps the "g" sound soft.  Don't forGEt.
    Sigh.
    
    Incidentally, phonetic spellings in Japanese (which can always be used,
    though of course imported Chinese characters are often preferred for
    many Japanese words), and I believe in Thai and Hebrew and Sanskrit
    and Korean and Greek, come very very close to internal consistency.
    I think the number of exceptions in Japanese pronunciation is less
    than 20, maybe less than 10.
    
    -- Norman Diamond
1025.22NLFDC::LEEThu Feb 18 1993 03:3210
    Is "ghettoization" correctly spelled ? It's probably not a word, I
    suppose the formal term for it should be "ghetto-forming", or "the
    formation of a ghetto".

    eg. in a sociology paper: "... to prevent ghettoization, these people
    should..."

    It's the -oi- that looks so peculiar.

    -Sim.
1025.23DATABS::LASHERWorking...Thu Feb 18 1993 03:597
    Re: .22
    
    	"It's the -oi- that looks so peculiar."
    
    If it really bothers you, then you can put a di�resis over the "i."
    
Lew Lasher
1025.24grnf, now, is really not a wordRAGMOP::T_PARMENTERHuman. All too human.Thu Feb 18 1993 06:093
    How can ghettoization not be a word?  It's in common use.  We all know
    what it means.
    
1025.25Stop me before I don't kill againESGWST::RDAVISNice imagery but a little gruesomeThu Feb 18 1993 08:418
>    on a line by itself at the end, and it appears that the irony went
>    unnoticed.  Sigh.  The "e" keeps the "g" sound soft.  Don't forGEt.
    
    Norman, I thought about titling my reply "Just so Norman doesn't think
    we didn't notice" but then thought, No, that would be overkill, no one
    could possibly misinterpret the spirit of this reply.
    
    Ray
1025.26JIT081::DIAMONDPardon me? Or must I be a criminal?Thu Feb 18 1993 19:446
    OK, sorry, and in fact I was so sorry that I accidentally typed "sorry"
    instead of "reply".  In compensation for your toils, I get the point,
    and let's spread oil on troubled waters, and regarding whether anyone
    should be concerned about "oi", I am not going to say anything.
    
    -- Norman Diamond
1025.27Don't ask me why I was thinking of this in the showerESGWST::RDAVISNice imagery but a little gruesomeFri Feb 19 1993 12:574
    That's OK.  This morning in the shower I realized that she should've
    been a giggling geisha girl.
    
    Ray
1025.28NOVA::FISHERDEC Rdb/DinosaurSun Feb 21 1993 07:346
    A reason that a dictionary is more useful for English than would
    be a mere list of correct spellings is that English has so many
    homophones you cannot tell which one is correct without looking at a
    definition.
    
    ed
1025.29RAGMOP::T_PARMENTERHuman. All too human.Mon Feb 22 1993 12:083
    The reason that The Word Book is not just a list of spellings is the
    same.  TWB and others like it always have homophones in them.