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  2. English orthography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_orthography

    [4] [20] The addition and deletion of a silent e at the ends of words was also sometimes used to make the right-hand margin line up more neatly. [20] By the time dictionaries were introduced in the mid-17th century, the spelling system of English had started to stabilise. By the 19th century, most words had set spellings, though it took some ...

  3. Wikipedia:List of spelling variants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:List_of_spelling...

    This is a list of British English words that have different American English spellings, for example, colour (British English) and color (American English). Word pairs are listed with the British English version first, in italics, followed by the American English version: spelt, spelled; Derived words often, but not always, follow their root.

  4. Phonological history of English consonant clusters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonological_history_of...

    The change took place in educated London speech around the end of the 16th century, and explains why there is no [ɡ] sound at the end of words like fang, sing, wrong and tongue in the standard varieties of Modern English. [28] The change in fact applies not only at the end of a word, but generally at the end of a morpheme.

  5. Phonological history of English consonants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonological_history_of...

    The voiceless velar and palatal fricative sounds [x] and [ç], considered to be allophones of /h/ and reflected by the gh in the spelling of words such as night, taught and weight, were lost in later Middle English or in Early Modern English. Their loss was accompanied by certain changes in the previous vowels.

  6. H-dropping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H-dropping

    The opposite of H-dropping, called H-insertion or H-adding, sometimes occurs as a hypercorrection in English accents that typically drop H. It is commonly noted in literature from late Victorian times to the early 20th century that some lower-class people consistently drop h in words that should have it, while adding h to words that should not ...

  7. List of words having different meanings in American and ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_words_having...

    (grade school, the grades) elementary school see also Grade Point Average: grade (other) (n.) a rating, degree, or level; (v.) to lay out in grades [US meaning generated grade separation and the idiom make the grade] slope, gradient, or elevation; also ground level ("at grade", "over grade"); hence grade crossing (UK: level crossing)

  8. SoundSpel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoundSpel

    SoundSpel is a regular and mostly phonemic English-language spelling reform proposal which uses the ISO basic Latin alphabet.Though SoundSpel was originally based on American English, [1] it can represent dialectal pronunciation, including British English.

  9. American and British English spelling differences - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_and_British...

    In Canada, the -ize ending is more common, although the Ontario Public School Spelling Book [65] spelled most words in the -ize form, but allowed for duality with a page insert as late as the 1970s, noting that, although the -ize spelling was in fact the convention used in the OED, the choice to spell such words in the -ise form was a matter of ...