Difference between revisions of "Language/English/Vocabulary/Words-with-different-spellings"

From Polyglot Club WIKI
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Replaced content with "Content Unavailable ==Content Unavailable== Error code 404")
Line 1: Line 1:
Did you know that in English some words can be written in several different ways (they have different spellings).
Content Unavailable
 
==Content Unavailable==
Here is a list of the main words:
Error code 404
 
{| class="wikitable"
!English words
!Comment
|-
|Acknowledgment/acknowledgement
|acknowledgment, without the  middle e, is preferred  in U.S. and Canadian English, while acknowledgement is preferred outside North America.
|-
|Adviser/advisor
|In the U.S. and Canada, advisor is commonly used in  official job titles, but adviser is still generally preferred over advisor in  North America, and advisor is only marginally more common in American and  Canadian English than in other varieties of English.
|-
|Aesthetic/esthetic
| You can you use both. The main difference between aesthetics and esthetics is that "aesthetic" is used in British English while "esthetics" is used in American English.
Aesthetics is a philosophical study that deals with the nature and appreciation of art, beauty, and taste.
|-
|Among/amongst
| Among is the earlier word of this pair: according to the ''Oxford English Dictionary'', it first appeared in Old English. The variant form, amongst, is a later development, coming along in the Middle English period. With regard to their meanings, there’s no difference between among and amongst.
|-
|Analog/analogue
|-
|Archaeology/archeology
| Both spellings are correct. Archaeology, or archeology, is the study of human activity through the recovery and analysis of material culture. 
|-
|Ax/axe
| Ax is used in American English. Axe is used in British English (Australia and Canada side with the British spelling).
|-
|Barbecue/Barbeque/BBQ
|The abbreviated spelling, BBQ, is the most popular way to spell barbecue, while "barbecue" comes in second. "Barbeque" is a distant third.
|-
|Collectable/collectible
|Collectable is a state of being. Collectible is a being. They may be interchangeable, but the word 'collectible' is mostly used to name a class of objects (THINGS that are collected), while the word 'collectable' describes objects (things that CAN BE collected).
|-
|Disc/disk
|-
|Donut/doughnut
|-
|Enquire/inquire
|-
|Flier/flyer
| The noun '''flier''' describes something or someone that flies. (In the United States, '''flier''' is occasionally used to denote a leaflet. However, '''flyer''' is more widely accepted for a leaflet.)
|-
|Gray/grey
|-
|Nite/night
| Even though you might see it on signs, ''nite'' is not (yet) an accepted spelling in standard English. It's a "cosy," informal way to spell ''night''. 
|-
|Theater/theatre
|-
|Toward/towards
|-
|Whiskey/whisky
|}

Revision as of 11:59, 4 April 2020

Content Unavailable

Content Unavailable

Error code 404