Language & Grammar discussion
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Spelling Demons

I loved school. For a near-sighted clumsy, shy kid it was wonderful. The one thing I was really good at.
School is a game you're good at or not. I was good at it completely in younger years, but then only in English and history in high school.
Now, I'm lucky. The game is my life and I get assigned the same courses every year -- all English!
Now, I'm lucky. The game is my life and I get assigned the same courses every year -- all English!

Newengland wrote: "School is a game you're good at or not. I was good at it completely in younger years, but then only in English and history in high school.
Now, I'm lucky. The game is my life and I get assigned th..."
I loved it all the way through my third college degree. No small wonder I loved teaching.
Now, I'm lucky. The game is my life and I get assigned th..."
I loved it all the way through my third college degree. No small wonder I loved teaching.

I wholehartedly agree with you, Ruth. You would have been a wonderful teacher. The nuns, as far as I know, had to teach themselves to be teachers!?
Did you teach Art,Literature etc? I don't recall. (I don't recall a lot these days!)
I taught mostly Drawing and Art History at the college level. I taught myself to teach, too. Never had a teaching course in my life. Colleges don't require it. All they want is that you have at least a Masters degree.


I believe that until Samuel Johnson started pushing conformity with his dictionary some latitude in English spelling was considered creative.
I generally accept and correct my misspellings using the spell checker built into the Chrome Browser but there are some words where I like my spelling more than their suggestions.
Of course I've added them to my browser dictionary and I can't seem to access them now in order to provide an example.




Thanks! It's has always bugged me as well. Course the alternative (It's) seems a bit vague if it means both the contraction and the possessive.
It's another case of overworking the apostrophe.
Perhaps we should take a clue from the Spanish. They use a tilda as a sort of contraction... The town I grew up in was Corunna, named after the old way of spelling the city now known as Coruña
Course that would require a lot of keyboard changes...

An error I frequently see in published works is 'lead' instead of 'led' - as the simple past tense of 'to lead'. I can understand this too - because people are used to seeing the noun 'lead' being spelt as 'lead' while pronounced as 'led'. But at one point I was seeing the spelling 'lead' for 'led so often that I actually wondered if I was mistaken in spelling it 'led', and had to check the OED to make sure!

And blogs too numerous to mention.
Another real bug to me is "between the 3 (or 4,5,6 ..) of them, she was the best dressed.
I was taught "Between 2, among 3 or more."

I had forgotten that one completely, yes, so true.
The 4th estate has no specialities now, that stop these things creeping into the system. All they have is what we have; a spell check facility that can only work if, to begin with, someone has put in the correct spelling!
I had to turn off the spellcheck in my email, it turned into a ravening monster that wouldn't let you send unless you followed it's directions, quite apart from the fact that it didn't recognise ordinary names and refused any spelling except American.

My brother has that problem in reverse. I'm a PC guy from the dawn of time but he is an Apple guy and all the genius at the Genius bar can't convince his machine that it's color not colour, etc.


Ah, now that doesn't surprise me - those are two newspapers about which I wouldn't hold out any hopes!

(Discounting the tabloid aspects, of course, though those are frequently the most interesting.)

I had forgotten asthma, that is right up there with rhythm!
Newspaper typos and grammatical/spelling errors are rampant these days.
Hmn. Spelled "rampant" correctly.
Hmn. Spelled "rampant" correctly.


I had forgotten asthma, that is right up there with rhythm!"
I think I should defend my country and inform you that those two words are of Greek origin and the confusing lettering is because of how they are pronounced in my language. For example, the h after r in rhythm shows that the vowel was overstressed in Ancient Greek.

Another one is eczema. Again, possibly easier for Americans, as in the UK it is pronounced 'ex-ma'. I say the American pronunciation in my head when I need to remember how to spell it.

hahaha....Are all Greek-originated words difficult for you? I am curious.
Some of them. I look up words from all over the globe. De rigueur, for instance. And perennial. Accommodate. Interrupt took me a while to figure. Canceling vs. cancelling. A lot of double with single consonant words.
I also see a lot of misspelled words as a teacher. A lot. It takes its toll...
I also see a lot of misspelled words as a teacher. A lot. It takes its toll...

What classes do you teach?
I teach 8th grade English. As it's one year before high school, we don't specialize so much as teach it all -- grammar, vocabulary, writing, reading, speaking, listening, and yes, ethics and manners.

I teach from first graders to adults, but the educational system is different here.
Poor Deb. Still rehydrating somewhere in the Antipodes.
Catherine, that's quite a one-room schoolhouse, teaching 1st to Last Graders....
Catherine, that's quite a one-room schoolhouse, teaching 1st to Last Graders....
Good one, Dwayne. And just yesterday, I saw a teacher stop mid-write on a whiteboard. He started to write "occasion" when he tripped up on the number of c's vs. s's. Oh, those double and single consonant words. They'll get you every time...

when I was a kid I always got the highest score in spelling.. :)"
I was like that Paulo, but the rest of my school days are best described as troubled:)! I passed my final exams, though!