different between spelling vs heterographic
spelling
English
Etymology
1400s, from spell (verb) +? -ing.
Pronunciation
- (Canada, General American, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?sp?l??/
- Rhymes: -?l??
- Hyphenation: spell?ing
Verb
spelling
- present participle of spell
- 2006, Wm. Shakespeare, Ann Thompson and Neil Taylor, eds., Hamlet, London: Arden Shakespeare:
- [p 88] A persuasive theory about the authority of the quarto or Folio texts might shed light on how Shakespeare actually spelt these names in a particular manuscript, but, since Shakespeare seemed capable of spelling his own name differently on different occasions, how reliable a guide would such evidence be?
- 2006, Wm. Shakespeare, Ann Thompson and Neil Taylor, eds., Hamlet, London: Arden Shakespeare:
Noun
spelling (countable and uncountable, plural spellings)
- (uncountable) The act, practice, ability, or subject of forming words with letters, or of reading the letters of words; orthography.
- 1904, Andrew Dickson White, Autobiography of Andrew Dickson White, p 43:
- For the practical use of spelling comes in writing.
- 1920, Henry Gallup Paine, Handbook of Simplified Spelling, New York: Simplified Spelling Board, p 1:
- Spelling was invented by man and, like other human inventions, is capable of development and improvement by man in the direction of simplicity, economy, and efficiency.
- 2001, w: Stephen White, The Program, New York: Dell, p 66:
- I knew that Kriciak, the inspector who was supervising me for the Marshals Service, was going to go nuts when I told him that I wanted to allow Landon to participate in soccer and spelling.
- 1904, Andrew Dickson White, Autobiography of Andrew Dickson White, p 43:
- (uncountable) The manner of spelling of words; correct spelling.
- 2006, Wm. Shakespeare, Ann Thompson and Neil Taylor, eds., Hamlet, London: Arden Shakespeare:
- [p 88] Because Elizabethan spelling was fluid, editors feel free to ‘modernize’ (correct) the spelling in the quartos and the Folio. But how is one to spell Rosencratz or Guildenstern, where the spelling varies, not only from text to text, but even within texts?
- 2006, Wm. Shakespeare, Ann Thompson and Neil Taylor, eds., Hamlet, London: Arden Shakespeare:
- (countable) A specific spelling of a word.
- 2006, Wm. Shakespeare, Ann Thompson and Neil Taylor, eds., Hamlet, London: Arden Shakespeare:
- [p 253] *excellent Q2’s ‘extent’ is generally dismissed as an error, probably a mis-reading of ‘exlent’, a common spelling at this time.
- [p 269] reverend The spellings ‘reuerent’ (Q2) and ‘Reuerend’ (F) were interchangeable at this time.
- [p 466] Guildensterne and Rosincrance are F’s consistent spellings.
- 2006, Wm. Shakespeare, Ann Thompson and Neil Taylor, eds., Hamlet, London: Arden Shakespeare:
- (US, rare, dated, countable or uncountable) A spelling test or spelling bee.
- 1860, Oscar Lawrence Jackson, The Colonel's Diary: Journals Kept Before and During the Civil War [1922], Sharon, Penn., p 23:
- The boys were anxious for a spelling in the evening but I said no.
- 1889, James Whitcomb Riley, “A’ Old Played-Out Song”, in Pipes O' Pan at Zekesbury, Indianapolis, Ind.: Bowen-Merrill, p 45:
- How her face ust to look, in the twilight, / As I tuck her to spellin’; and she / Kep’ a-hummin’ that song ’tel I ast her, / Pine-blank, ef she ever missed me!
- 2004, Carl Lindahl, ed., American Folktales: From the Collections of the Library of Congress, v 1, Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, p 416:
- So we'd sit with these girls during school hours, and we told them, if they'd slip off, that we'd get away, and we'd go to [the school] to a spelling.
- 1860, Oscar Lawrence Jackson, The Colonel's Diary: Journals Kept Before and During the Civil War [1922], Sharon, Penn., p 23:
Usage notes
- Adjectives often used with "spelling": correct, incorrect, right, wrong, usual, unusual, standard, alternative, nonstandard, customary, common, rare.
Synonyms
- (subject): orthography
Translations
Derived terms
Afrikaans
Etymology
From Dutch spelling, from Middle Dutch spellinge. Equivalent to spel +? -ing.
Noun
spelling (plural spellings or spellinge)
- spelling
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch spellinge. Equivalent to spellen +? -ing.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?sp?.l??/
- Hyphenation: spel?ling
- Rhymes: -?l??
Noun
spelling f (plural spellingen, diminutive spellinkje n)
- spelling
Derived terms
- groene spelling
- spellinghervorming
- spellingvariant
- spellingvereenvoudiging
- witte spelling
Descendants
- Afrikaans: spelling
spelling From the web:
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heterographic
English
Etymology
From heterography.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?h?t.?.??????æf.ik/
- (US) IPA(key): /?h?t.?.?o????æf.ik/
Adjective
heterographic (not comparable)
- Misspelled; of or pertaining to an incorrect spelling or a spelling that differs from accepted standards.
- (linguistics) Of a writing system in which a particular symbol represents more than one possible sound.
- In English. many letters are heterographic.
- 2008, Elena L. Grigorenko & Adam J. Naples, Single-word Reading: Behavioral and Biological Perspectives, page 140
- English has few such heterophonic homographs, hence much of the work in English (and French) examining orthography-phonology consistency effects at the whole-word level has focused on heterographic homophones.
Synonyms
- (misspelled): misspelled, misspelt
Antonyms
- (of a writing system): homographic
Related terms
- heterography
Translations
heterographic From the web:
- what is heterographic homophones
- what does heterotrophic mean
- what does heterotrophic
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