Hardest common words for you to spell

  • Thread starter Greg Bernhardt
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In summary, the conversation discusses various words that are commonly misspelled or confused, such as "maintenance", "ecstasy", "conscience", "entrepreneur", and "unnecessary". Some people have mnemonic devices to help them remember the spelling of these words. Other words mentioned include "bureaucratic", "protein", "diarrhea", "hemorrhage", and "restaurant". Some words are spelled differently in the UK and USA, causing confusion for those who work for international companies. Other words that are difficult to spell or remember include "dilemma", "scissors", "physics", "fluorescence", "vacuum", "homogeneous", "parallel", and words with double letters.
  • #106
As a kid I remember getting these words wrong and I still have to think about the first.
“Necessary, similarly , separately.”

“Colleague” I miss out the u sometimes

“Guard” more recently and also “their”

I am pretty certain I was ok with those words years ago

I have a co-worker called Gaurav and I wonder if that has confused my GUA/GAU combinations.

Why “their” after this time?

The “I before e except after c rule,” has got be one of the most inaccurate sayings in the English language.
 
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  • #107
pinball1970 said:
The “I before e except after c rule,” has got be one of the most inaccurate sayings in the English language.
Better is: i before e, except after c, but only when the sound is like ee, and not if it's a chemical (protein etc.) and not if it's seize or weird.
 
  • #108
PeroK said:
Better is: i before e, except after c, but only when the sound is like ee, and not if it's a chemical (protein etc.) and not if it's seize or weird.
As you say, the "ee" sound is enough to make it cover most cases. The version I learned was:

When "I" and "E" together say "ee"
It's "I" before "E" except after "C".

I agree that "seize" is an anomaly, and also chemical terms such as caffeine and protein. I guess I pronounce "weird" (and "weir") weirdly, in that I don't count that as an "ee" sound, more a "ee-er" sound from "we-ir".
 
  • #109
... and to make it even more complicated for us foreigners, you chose to pronounce either and either differently ...
 
  • #110
PeroK said:
Better is: i before e, except after c, but only when the sound is like ee, and not if it's a chemical (protein etc.) and not if it's seize or weird.
Or Science….https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Category:English_words_not_following_the_I_before_E_except_after_C_rule

I am not sure what an aatheist is, is that just a theist? Or someone who does not think atheists exist?
 
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  • #111
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  • #112
1629132836889.png
 
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  • #113
1629133080606.png
 
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  • #114
Things that come to me while I'm trying to fall asleep:

Is there a word for that noise that get's a horse to walk?
How do you spell the noise?
"Tktk"?
 
  • #115
Is there a word for that noise that get's a horse to walk?
There probably is, in the field of what sounds people make (maybe linguistics, or neuro-linguistics, speech and hearing, something else?).
There are names for particular electromagnetic signals (calls) put out by actively electro-sensitive fish.
They are converted to audio from what electrodes pick up in the water.
It is a "sound" that no one can hear (as the fish could), and it has a name.

There will often be a specialist who came up with names of things that no one else would even think about.
 
  • #116
tch ?
 
  • #117
hmmm27 said:
tch ?
Mm. "tch" is what Andy Capp's wife said a lot.
That's a sound of derision.
It's the sound of "ts" but sucking in over the teeth rather than blowing out.

This is a summons, like clicking with your tongue on your molars.
 
  • #118
DaveC426913 said:
Is there a word for that noise that get's a horse to walk?
It is a cluck or a click (listen to the audio file for the distinction). This one talks about cluck & kisses. Merriam-Webster seems to prefer cluck. (see example: The driver clucked at the horses to get them moving.)
 
  • #119
jack action said:
It is a cluck or a click (listen to the audio file for the distinction). This one talks about cluck & kisses. Merriam-Webster seems to prefer cluck. (see example: The driver clucked at the horses to get them moving.)
Yeah, I wondered about 'cluck'. But the click sound in that audio is actually the sound I meant.

So, the sound is called a click, but that is not how it is pronounced. 'Click' is not onomatopoeiac.

I don't think the phoneme actually has a spelling that evokes the sound. I wonder how many phonemes there are like that...
 
  • #120
DaveC426913 said:
How do you spell the noise?
tsk? Or the big reference on the web comes from the book "Misoso: Once Upon a Time Tales from Africa", by Verna Aardema who uses tlick. Though, I think it is to define the clicking sound heard in some African languages.
 
  • #121
jack action said:
tsk? Or the big reference on the web comes from the book "Misoso: Once Upon a Time Tales from Africa", by Verna Aardema who uses tlick. Though, I think it is to define the clicking sound heard in some African languages.
What about G-up or Giddy-up?
 
  • #122
Stephen Tashi said:
"Dining" as in "dining room". I often spell it "dinning" and the spell checkers don't object.
The double consonant after an i vowel usually changes the vowel's sound, and similar for some other vowels, although I can't think of any examples.

So slimer (think Ghostbusters) would be pronounced differently from slimmer -- long i in the first, and short i in the second. Another example would be griper vs. gripper, or miler vs. miller.
 
  • #123
Mark44 said:
The double consonant after an i vowel usually changes the vowel's sound, and similar for some other vowels, although I can't think of any examples.
An example would be 'below' and 'bellow'. Also 'folic' and 'follow'.
 
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  • #124
lieutenant
 
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  • #125
TIL, cleidoic meaning of an egg. : enclosed in a relatively impervious shell which reduces free exchange with the environment. The eggs of birds are cleidoic.
 
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  • #126
Hornbein said:
lieutenant
Not so hard if you understand the origin...
https://www.etymonline.com/word/lieutenant said:
from Old French lieu tenant "substitute, deputy," literally "place holder" (14c.), from lieu "place" (see lieu) + tenant, present participle of tenir "to hold,"
 
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  • #127
Mark44 said:
Not so hard if you understand the origin...
So a lieutenant is a substitute for a leader.
 
  • #128
Hornbein said:
So a lieutenant is a substitute for a leader.
In the Army, not only a Lieutenant, but a Sergeant or a Corporal or a Private First Class, can and should, if he's of the highest rank still alive, take command on the field of battle.
 
  • #129
sysprog said:
In the Army, not only a Lieutenant, but a Sergeant or a Corporal or a Private First Class, can and should, if he's of the highest rank still alive, take command on the field of battle.
Maybe so, but thanks to Mark44 and his mnemonic, I will never again not know how to spell lieutenant.

(Now if only there were a mnemonic for spelling lieu...
 
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  • #130
DaveC426913 said:
Maybe so, but thanks to Mark44 and his mnemonic, I will never again not know how to spell lieutenant.
It wasn't a mnemonic -- what I gave was the etymology.
DaveC426913 said:
(Now if only there were a mnemonic for spelling lieu...
Isn't French one of the two main languages where you are? Lieu is a French word that's now part of English.
 
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  • #131
Mark44 said:
It wasn't a mnemonic -- what I gave was the etymology.
Fair enough. I'm using it as a mnemonic.

Mark44 said:
Isn't French one of the two main languages where you are? Lieu is a French word that's now part of English.
Why would you think I'm any better at spelling in French than in English? :wink:
 
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  • #132
Hornbein said:
So a lieutenant is a substitute for a leader.
Right, like when you see "Lieutenant Governor"
 
  • #133
Greg Bernhardt said:
There are some words even though not really difficult often require me to spell check in Google. For me it's "maintenance", "ecstasy", "conscience", "entrepreneur", "unnecessary".

"Necessary" is a problem child of mine. But then again English is my second language. (Which doesn't prevent me from beating the natives in scrabble. I don't know who(m?) that says most about? Probably the small weird (weird small?) 2-3 letter words no one ever use(s?).
 
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