201 The English Spelling System by Don L. F. Nilsen and Alleen Pace Nilsen.
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Transcript of 201 The English Spelling System by Don L. F. Nilsen and Alleen Pace Nilsen.
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The EnglishSpelling System
by Don L. F. Nilsen
and Alleen Pace Nilsen
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The Spell Checker has changed the types of errors that students make
Eye have a spelling chequer
It came with my pea sea
It plainly marques four my revue
Miss steaks eye kin knot sea.
Eye strike a key and type a word
And weight four it two say
Weather eye am wrong oar write
It shows me strait a weigh
As soon as a mist ache is maid
It nose bee fore two long
And eye can put the error rite
Its rare lea ever wrong.
Eye have run this poem threw it
I am shore your pleased two no
Its letter perfect awl the weigh
My chequer tolled me sew.
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Smith & Wilhelm’s Top Ten Spelling Errors
1. advice-advise2. affect-effect3. accept-except4. principal-principle5. than-then6. their-there-they’re7. to-too-two8. wear-we’re-were-where9. who’s-whose10. your-you’re (yore)
(Smith & Wilhelm 70)
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Homonyms
Aloud-allowed
Altar-alter
Are-or-our
Capital-capitol
Censer-censor
Cite-site-sightCompliment-complement
Disburse-disperse
Feat-feet
Flair-flare
Foreword-forward
It’s-its
miner-minor
Morning-mourning (regional)
Pair-pear-pare
Peace-piece
Pedals-petals
Picture-pitcher
Principal-principle
Role-roll
Scents-sense
Sole-soul
Stationary-stationery
Their-there-they’re
Threw-through
To-too-two
Vial-vile
Who’s-whose
(Smith & Wilhelm 150-169)
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Homonoids
A-an
Accept-except
Advice-advise
Affect-effect
Allusion-illusion
Anecdote-antidote
Bath-bathe
Beauty (fr French
beau)
Beside-besides
Breath-breathe
Censer-censure
Cloth-clothe
Decent-descent
Desert-dessert
Device-devise
Eminent-imminent
Farther-further
Feet-fete
Flaunt-flout
Hoping-hopping
Lath-lathe
Loath-loathe
Loose-lose
Precede-proceed
Scared-scarred
Sense-since (regional)
Sparing-sparring
Staring-starring
Striped-stripped
Teeth-teethe
Than-then (regional)uninhabited-uninhibited
Wander-wonderWear-we’re-were-where
(regional)
Weather-whether
(regional)
Which-witch (regional)
(Smith & Wilhelm 150-169)
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OUR ENGLISH ALPHABET HAS ONLY 26 LETTERS TO REPRESENT 45 DIFFERENT SOUNDS
AND SOME OF OUR LETTERS (LIKE C, Q, H, AND X) AREN’T VERY USEFUL
ENGLISH HAS 5 VOWEL LETTERS TO REPRESENT 13 VOWEL SOUNDS
AND WE USE THEM ALL UP FOR OUR SHORT VOWELS, AS IN: pat, pet, pit, pot, and put
SO WE DON’T HAVE ANY LETTERS LEFT FOR OUR LONG VOWELS, AND THE RESULT IS CHAOS
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• SO THIS IS HOW WE SPELL OUR LONG VOWELS• A, E, I, O, and U:
• A: He ate the freight. It was his fate. How do you spell 8/eight?
• E: The silly amoeba stole the key to the machine. or • Did he believe that Caesar could see the people?
• I: I write eye-rhyme, like “She cited the sight of the site.”
• O: Our chauffeur, although he stubbed his toe, yeomanly towed four more boards through the open door of the depot.
• U: blue, blew, gnu, Hugh, new, Pooh, Sioux, through, two
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VIOLATIONS OF THE PHONEMIC PRINCIPLE
• SAME PRONUNCIATION BUT DIFFERENT SPELLINGS (DIFFERENT WORD FAMILIES): cite-sight-site, marry-Mary-merry, pair-pare-pear, there-their-they're
• SAME SPELLINGS BUT DIFFERENT PRONUNCIATIONS (SAME WORD FAMILIES): nation-national, obscene-obscenity, sign-signature, go-gone, ct. soup-supper
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CONSONANT GRADES:FULL, H-MARKED, REDUCED, ZERO
• REDUCED GRADE: act-action-actual, critic-criticize, medicine-medication, part-partial, rite-ritual, seize-seizure
• MARKED GRADE: chip, cough, hiccough, enough, phone, ship, this, thought (NOTE: The <h> of ch, gh, ph, sh, and th indicates that these are strange kinds of c, g, p, s, and t respectively.
• ZERO GRADE: acknowledge-knowledge; amnesia-mnemonic; though, thought, through, thumb-thimble-Thumbelina
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MORE CONSONANT ASSIMILATIONS
• MODAL PLUS "HAVE" ASSIMILATION: coulda, mighta, shoulda, woulda
• MODAL PLUS "TO" ASSIMILATION: gonna, hafta, hasta, supposta, useta
• CONTRACTIONS: *ain’t, can’t, couldn’t, won’t, wouldn’t, shan’t, shouldn’t, *mayn’t, (mightn’t, mustn’t)
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CONSONANT ASSIMILATIONFOR EASE AND SPEED
• VERB 3rd sing pres ind: sings, hits
• VERB past: buzzed, jumped
• VERB past part: popped, killed • NOUN plurals: cats, dogs
• NOUN possessives: Mike's, Fred's • ADJ substantive: its, ours
• PREFIX: (NOTE: in- assimilates as follows): illegal, immature, impotent, indelicate, irreligious
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ASSIMILATION: PALATALIZATION
• When a word that ends with a /t/ is followed by a –ual, -ial, or -ion ending, the palatal vowel <y-> changes the /t/ sound into a /č/ sound.
• addict addiction• act actual or action• part partial • predict prediction
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ASSIMILATION: STOPS BECOME CONTINUANTS
• Because /k/ is a stop, and vowels are continuants, an affix beginning with a vowel often changes /k/ to /s/.
• critic criticize or criticism• fanatic fanaticism• romantic romanticism
• This ability of the <c> to have two different pronunciations allows us to spell these words the same way even though they are pronounced differently. The benefit of this is that it helps us to see that these words are in the same word-family even though the <c> part is pronounced differently.
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CONSONANT DISSIMILATION: FOR CLARITY
• VERB 3rd person singular present indicative: buzzes
• VERB past tense: heated
• VERB past participle: spotted
• NOUN plural: horses
• NOUN possessive: Max’s
• NOUN: belfry
• ADJ: ignoble
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DISSIMILATION AGAIN
• “-al” is a suffix that changes a Noun into an Adjective, but when the Noun ends in /l/, dissimilation occurs:
• “anecdotal” but “angular”• “penal” but “perpendicular”• “spiritual” but “similar”• “venal” but “velar”
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VOWEL GRADES: LONG, SHORT, SCHWA, R, AND ZERO
• VOWEL REDUCTION (SCHWA GRADE): natural-naturalize-naturalization, photo-photograph-photographic-photography, s'pose-suppose-supposition, telegraph- telegraphic-telegraphy
• VOWEL REDUCTION (-R or –N GRADE): pin-pen; absurd, bird,
heard, herd, word
• VOWEL REDUCTION (ZERO GRADE): dexterity-ambidextrous, busy-business
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VOWEL REDUCTION AND ASSIMILATION
• BRITISH VOWEL REDUCTION: aluminum, laboratory, secretary
• LONG AND SHORT GRADES: do-done, go-gone, nation-national, obscene-obscenity, punitive-punish, sign-signature, soup-supper
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vowel reduction and word stress
• When a suffix changes a word from one Part of Speech to another, this suffix affects which syllables are stressed, and which are unstressed and can change to different vowel grades like schwa or short grade:
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analysis-analytic
compete-competition
maintain-maintenance
medicine-medicinal
phone-phonetic
solid-solidity
Talmud-Talmudic
telegraph-telegraphy
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!HISTORICAL CONSIDERATIONS
• TRACES: ic-ich-I, knight, hostel-hôtel-hotel, scribere-écrire-scribe
• DOUBLETS: chief-chef, dish-discus, hotel-hostel, ship-skiff, shirt-skirt
• GRIMM'S LAW: courage-hearty, corn-horn, decade-ten, dozen-twelve, dent-tooth, pedestal-footnote, padre-father, plate-flat, pyre-fire
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!MORE HISTORIC CONSIDERATIONS
• GERMANIC UMLAUT: child, goose, man, mouse, woman (cf. book-beech)
• GREEK RHOTOCISM: genus-generic; opus-opera
• ENGLISH: schwa and silent e
• ACRONYMS AS WORDS: AID, AIDS, BIRP, CREEP, GASP, MANURE, MASH, NOW, NUT, SAG, VISTA, ZIP
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!!FOREIGN-LANGUAGE INFLUENCES
• BORROWINGS: chaise longue, cole slaw, frankfurter, hamburger, lingerie, rouge, schnitzel, wiener
• BILINGUAL COGNATES: actual, embarazada, grocería, libraria, molestar, principio, (cf. blanket [white], porpoise [pig fish], puny [puis né], walrus [whale horse])
• INDO-EUROPEAN ABLAUT: sing-sang-sung-song
• MODAL PAST-SUBJUNCTIVE: can-could, may-might, shall-should, will-would
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!!!FINAL THOUGHTS FROM OGDEN NASH
The one-l lama,He’s a priest.The two-l llama, He’s a beast.And I will bet A silk pajamaThere isn’t any Three-l lllama.
In response to this poem one wit remarked, “A three-alarmer (three-l lllama) is a really big fire.”
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References:
Clark, Virginia P., Paul A. Eschholz, and Alfred F. Rosa, ed. Clark, Virginia P., Paul A. Eschholz, and Alfred F. Rosa, ed. Language: Language: Readings in Language and Culture, Sixth EditionReadings in Language and Culture, Sixth Edition. Boston, MA: . Boston, MA: Bedford, St. Martins, 1998.Bedford, St. Martins, 1998.
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman, and Nina Hyams. An Introduction to Language, 8th Edition. Boston, MA: Thomson Wadsworth, 2007, 255-312.
Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. Encyclopedia of 20th Century American Humor. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2000.
Nilsen, Don L. F., and Alleen Pace Nilsen. Pronunciation Contrasts in English. New York, NY: Regents Publishing Co., 1973; reissued by Waveland Press in 2002.
Smith, Michael W., and Jeffrey D. Wilhelm. Getting It Right: Fresh Approaches to Teaching Grammar, Usage and Correctness. New York, NY: Scholastic, 2007.