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The document discusses how English spelling was influenced by the Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Vikings, Normans and others over time and how understanding the history can help with spelling. It also mentions strategies like learning spelling rules and using memory tricks.

The document mentions that the Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons (from northern Germany and Holland), Vikings/Danes/Norsemen, and Normans/French invaded Britain and influenced the development of English, introducing spelling patterns and words from their languages.

The document states that the Normans/French invasion in 1066, changes in pronunciation over time, medieval handwriting, and the printing press introduction caused chaos and irregularities in English spelling.

www.howtospell.co.

uk 1
Table of Contents

Welcome to the Weird and Wonderful World of English


Spelling. 4
Things Youre Going to Learn 5
Spelling v Pronunciation 6
Quick Quiz 9
The Celts 11
The Romans 12
The Anglo-Saxons - the English! 14
(northern Germany & Holland) 14
The Anglo-Saxon -gh- letter pattern 15
Pronunciation of -gh- words 16
The Vikings/Danes/Norsemen 18
Viking vs Anglo-Saxon words 19
Old English Letter Patterns 20
The Normans / French (1066) 22
The Chaos Begins! 24
The Letter Q 25
Medieval Handwriting and the Consequences Now. 26
-ou- letter pattern 27
The Letter C 28
The Letter G 31
The Letter H 32
Norman vs Saxon Words 33
Informal and Formal Words 34
The Middle Ages: 1066 -1485 (Middle English) 36
Anglo-Saxon, French and Latin Word Choices. 37
Legalese - lawyer speak 38
William Caxton and the Printers 40
The Great Vowel Shift 43
www.howtospell.co.uk 2
Academics and Troublesome Silent Letters 44
William Shakespeare 45
Magic e Silent e 46
18th 19th 20th 21st Centuries 47
Samuel Johnson and Dictionaries 49
American English vs British English 50
American vs British Spellings 51
Technology 53
The Influence of Greek 54
More Weird and Wonderful Spellings 55
Past Tenses 56
Silent Letters 57
Plurals 59
will not / wont 60
Ch- Letter Pattern and Pronunciation 61
Word Families/Letter Patterns Linked by Meaning 62
-le and -el endings 66
History of English Spelling Timeline 67
Answers to Quiz 69
Summary Map 70
Conclusion 71
What youve learnt 72
How to improve your spelling 73
Acknowledgements 75
www.howtospell.co.uk 76
Spelling Strategies Video 77

www.howtospell.co.uk 3
Welcome to the Weird and Wonderful World of English
Spelling.

Hi, this is Joanne Rudling, and thank you for buying this ebook. I
know from 14 years experience teaching spelling, writing and literacy
people really get frustrated with English spelling, and are always
asking why certain words are spelled the way they are and why we
cant simplify spelling.

Learning about the history of English spelling will make you appreciate
and love spelling for all its weird and wonderful ways, and youll really
understand the logic behind the illogical.

Understanding the history of English spelling and why words are


spelled the way they are, and taking an interest in where words come
from are two of the most important ways to improve and learn
spelling.

The benefits of knowing the history of English spelling are huge, youll
gain confidence in spelling, youll be able to spell those difficult letter
patterns easier and you wont get so angry at spelling.

So here goes...

www.howtospell.co.uk 4
Things Youre Going to Learn

At the end of this book:

l youll know exactly why English spelling is the way it is


with all its quirks and strangeness,

l youll see the logic in the English spelling system and


feel more confident about it,

l youll feel happier about spelling and love it!

l youll understand why you cant rely on pronunciation


for spelling, and how pronunciation changed over the
centuries but spelling didnt,

l youll know how the various tribes that invaded Britain


developed English and made it so strange,

l youll know who caused our spelling problems,

l youll improve your vocabulary and know why there are


so many words that mean the same thing or similar.

www.howtospell.co.uk 5
Spelling v Pronunciation

Spelling reform, simplifying spelling, moaning about spelling wont


work and wont help you.

Learning to love spelling will work and will help you.

Some people blame their accents and the way they say words for not being
able to spell well. They think that if they speak properly and pronounce
words correctly theyll be able to spell. But this is not true. The English
spelling system doesnt work like that. We can have loads of different ways
of saying the same word which means we cant have a standard spelling for
it. For example, I say bath /bath/ with a flat a /bath/ others say /barth/
with a long /a/ sound.

There have always been lots of different English accents and dialects. How
we say words still varies from region to region and country to country -
London, east Midlands, Liverpool, Newcastle, Scotland, American,
Australian, Indian, the Caribbean etc. So a simplified, standardized spelling
system couldnt possibly reflect all these great varieties of English.

Another reason why spelling and pronunciation are different is that the way
we say words has changed over the centuries while the spelling remained
fixed. Sometimes the way something is spelt shows us the history of the
word and the way people spoke it centuries ago - and thats why the
spelling might seem a bit strange.

www.howtospell.co.uk 6
English is a modern, living language but also one that reflects a
fascinating history. Each time Britain was invaded so too was the
language.

An understanding of how words have developed can make


learning spelling more interesting and less frustrating.

Knowing where our words come from can help you feel better
about those strange groups of letters that seem to make no
sense at all.

(Adult Learners Guide to Spelling by Anne Betteridge)

www.howtospell.co.uk 7
English spelling can seem weird because its not
always easy to see why words are spelled the way
they are.

The problem is that the English spelling system developed slowly


over the centuries, and the irregularities came about because of
various writers trying to fit their alphabet and sounds to English.
Latin writers, French scribes, the printing presses of the 1400s,
and 16th Century English academics all changed and introduced
their own strange ways of spelling words.

In this book well look at what sorts of problems these lot caused
us and how we can use this knowledge to help us feel less
infuriated with English spelling.

www.howtospell.co.uk 8
Quick Quiz

Do you know any of the answers to the questions below?

1. What language did the Romans speak?

2. What did the Romans name Britain?

3. Which tribe of people did the English come from?

4. What name did the Anglo-Saxons give England?

5. Why is there a silent k and g in know, knock, gnaw, gnat?

6. Which country did the Normans come from?

7. What famous date did they invade Britain?

8. Why is -gh silent or pronounced with a f?

9. Why do we pronounce come, son, woman with a u but spell

it with an o?

10. Why are there so many words that mean the same thing?

www.howtospell.co.uk 9
A Brief History of England and English Spelling.

l English developed from the languages of the invaders that settled


in England: the Romans, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Vikings, and
finally the Normans.

l English comes from the following languages: Germanic (German,


Scandinavian and Dutch), Romance (Latin and French).

l This is why there is a big variety of words and spellings.

www.howtospell.co.uk 10
The Celts

Were not sure who first lived in England. But we know something about
the Celts who settled here by 400BC. They spoke Celtic.

Celtic still exists today in Ireland (Irish Gaelic), Scotland (Scots Gaelic) and
Wales (Welsh).

The Celts built Stonehenge

English borrowed only a few words from Celtic, for example: bog, slug,
trousers, whiskey...

www.howtospell.co.uk 11
The Romans
(from Italy)

The first landings in Britain by the Romans took place from 55BC to
check out the country and do some trade.

l In 43AD the Romans finally invaded and colonised Britain.


They called this country Britannia.

l They spoke Latin.


l Romans loved cities and built Londinium (London), Chester,
Lancaster, Gloucester, Winchester and the famous Roman baths in
Bath.

www.howtospell.co.uk 12
The British ruling Celtic tribes adopted Latin as a
second language. But in the countryside they still
spoke Celtic.

l We still use some Roman words: island, scissors,


debt, plumber. They all contain silent letters
which show the history of the word. For
example, plumber which comes from the Latin/
Roman word plumbum meaning lead (lead piping) used in plumbing.

l The Romans also gave us the following words: tribe, villa, election,
sewage, sewer, myth, legion, cohort, camouflage

l We still use Latin in law - bona fide, pro forma, subpoena, sub, pro,
bonus, prima...

In 410 AD the Romans withdrew from Britain


because they needed to defend Rome and Italy
from invaders. But some Romans stayed.

Latin was still used for writing and in the administration of Britain by
educated Britons. Celtic continued to be spoken.

Many of our words are based on Latin words and not Celtic.

Latin really hit spelling hard when the French invaded in 1066 and the
Renaissance took place in 16th century (watch out for those periods later!)

www.howtospell.co.uk 13
The Anglo-Saxons - the English!
(northern Germany & Holland)

From 410AD when the Romans left, tribes from northern Europe
began to invade Britain.

These Saxons, Angles and Jutes spoke a number of Germanic


languages that eventually became Anglo-Saxon/Old English.

l They gave England the name Angle-land.

l The Anglo-Saxons became the English!

l The 100 most common words in present day English


are from Anglo-Saxon, including
everyday words: earth, house, food, sing,
night, daughter, women, cough, sleep

www.howtospell.co.uk 14
The Anglo-Saxon -gh- letter pattern

-gh
-ight, -ough, -augh
The difficult -gh letter
patterns: ight, -gh-, -gh, -ough, all come from Anglo-Saxon
words (in brackets): daughter (dohtor), night (niht),
light (liht), bright (beorht), dough (dg), bough (bh),
rough (ruh)

l The h was a hard throaty sound like the Scottish sound in loch.

l Then around the 13th century the h became gh because of the


French influence to try to indicate this throaty sound.

l Then in about the 17th century the gh sound was either dropped
or became f sound: enough, cough, though, through, plough,
rough, borough, slaughter, nought, laugh...

Which of these -gh- words are


silent and which have a f sound?

enough, cough, though, through, rough, toughen


borough, roughly, slaughter, nought, laugh.

Answers

silent -gh- f sound


though, through, borough, enough, cough, rough, laugh,
tough
slaughter, nought, daughter.
roughly
toughen

www.howtospell.co.uk 15
Pronunciation of -gh- words

-ough has seven sounds

Have you thought this through thoroughly enough?

oo - /too/ through
off - /coff/ cough, trough
uff - /cuff/ enough, rough, tough
oh -/toe/ dough, though, although
ow - /how/ bough, doughty
u - /uh, up/ borough, thorough
or - /or/ bought, brought, fought, nought, ought,
sought, wrought, thought

-augh normally sounds like /or/ - door/nor

daughter /dort a/, naughty, slaughter, taught, haughty

but laugh is pronounced with a long or short a


laff or larff

-eigh normally sounds like /ay/ - say, day

eight, neighbour, weigh, weight, sleigh

but height rhymes with bite!!

-igh sounds like i in tie

high, sigh, thigh, light, delight, sight, might, night, right, tight, flight

Thanks to Joy Pollock www.howtospell.co.uk 16


1. Can you guess these Saxon words? (Read them out aloud)
hwo, hwat, hwer, hwil, hwael, hwit, hwy

2. Can you guess these words? tyn, twentig, hundred, reod, grene,
man, wifman

Answers

1. hwo = who, hwat = what, hwer = where, hwil = while,


hwael=whale hwit = white hwy =why
(some people still pronounce the h!)

These words were originally written as they were spoken- the h and w
both pronounced. By 1300 the letters had been switched to wh, maybe so
it matched the other words with h patterns - ch and th and to make it
more French.

2. tyn ten
twentig twenty
hundred hundred
fif hundred reo ond twentig five hundred and twenty-three
cese cheese (c used to be ch)
reod red
grene green
geolu yellow
man human
wifman woman

www.howtospell.co.uk 17
The Vikings/Danes/Norsemen
(from Scandinavia)

l In the eighth century, 793AD, the Vikings (Norsemen or Danes)


invaded Britain from Scandinavia.

l After fighting the Anglo-Saxons, they eventually lived together in


peace.

l The Anglo-Saxon and Viking (Old Norse) languages combined to


become Old English which is also referred to as Anglo-Saxon.

l The Vikings brought 2000 new words into English: anger, awkward,
cake, die, egg, freckle, muggy, reindeer, silver, skirt and smile.

l knee, knuckle, knife, know, knot, gnaw, gnat are all Viking words.
The k and g were pronounced by the Vikings. But now they are
silent but used in writing to show the history of the word.

l A lot of words with the beginning sk- and sc- are from the Vikings
sky, skin, skip, skill, skate (the fish), skirt, scab, scale, scanty,
scar, scare, scathe, scorch, score, scowl...

www.howtospell.co.uk 18
Viking vs Anglo-Saxon words

As Viking words became English, people could choose between


Anglo-Saxon or Viking words:

wish or want, craft or skill, hide or skin, raise or rear,


break or breach, skirt or shirt, wake or watch.

These words used to mean the same thing but over time the meanings of
these words have changed slightly.

King Alfred (Alfred the Great)


united England and showed the
people they could have a great
language and literature of their !
own.

www.howtospell.co.uk 19
Old English Letter Patterns

Many modern English letter patterns come from Old English:


igh, gh, wh, ch, aw, ow, ew, sk, tch, wi, lk, wr, th.

Learning common Old English letter patterns will help to improve your
spelling.

Remember with letter patterns the visual pattern is important not the
sound.

wh- kn- -gh -igh -aw -ow -ew


when knife through right law cow new
who know brought eight drawer show knew
whether knock daughter frighten saw shadow blew
white knee enough high raw below flew
wheel knight laugh neighbour straw bowl screw
know

-all -lk wi- sk- -tch wr- th-

all folk wit sky match wreck their


call talk witness skirt watch wrong they
ball walk wish skin thatch write thrift
tall stalk wise skirmish scratch writ thrust
fall witches skill wrist tether
hall wizard both
birth

If you learn these youll be less likely to write hg instead of gh and


youll know why there are silent k and g in knee/knock/gnaw/gnome
- theyre not there to mess with your brain!

Thanks to Johanna Stirlings www.howtospell.co.uk 20


Teaching Spelling book
Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse combined to become Old English, and
with it a rich tradition of literature.

This is when English spelling became complicated.


The Christian missionaries tried to use their Latin 23-
letter alphabet for the 35 or so sounds of Old English.
They couldnt fit the sounds in so they used some of
the old Rune alphabet and a combination of letters.

Basically, they manipulated the alphabet onto the


sounds.

These haunt our spellings today.

And then the French came along to really confuse things and cause
chaos with our spelling.

www.howtospell.co.uk 21
The Normans / French (1066)

The Duke of Normandy (William the


Conqueror) invaded Britain in 1066.

The French defeated the English at the Battle of


Hastings.

www.howtospell.co.uk 22
l The Normans (the French)
settled in Britain over the next
three centuries.

l French became the language of


the nobility (the king, queens and the aristocrats).

l French and Latin became the language of law and


government.

l English was the language of the lower classes and peasants


(the farmers), and it stopped being a written language.

l The peasants were the English-speaking Saxons and their


movements were restricted, and they were oppressed by the
Norman landowners. A feudal system came into being.

l The lords and barons (the bosses) were the French-speaking


Normans (French).

l Thousands of French words became English: crown, castle,


parliament, army, mansion, romance, chess, colour, servant,
peasant, traitor, governor and spelled the French way.

l Spelling became more complicated as the Norman scribes


applied French spelling rules to English.

www.howtospell.co.uk 23
The Chaos Begins!

Scribes had the job of handwriting and copying


documents, books, laws, etc.

French scribes introduced new spellings that are with us today (and giving
us headaches!)

1. ce replaced s: Old English mys, Modern English mice. (page 57)

2. ch replaced c: Old English cild, Modern English child (page 59)

3. gh replaced h: Old English liht, Modern English light (page 15)

4. qu replaced cw: Old English cwen, Modern English queen (page 25)

5. o replaced u when next to m,n,v,w, Old English sunu, Modern English


son. (page 26)
6. ou replaced u: Old English hus or wund, Modern English house or
wound. (page 27)

Thanks to Upward & Davidson


The History of English Spelling

www.howtospell.co.uk 24
The Letter Q

The French replaced several Old English spellings including, cw to qu.


In Old English the sound qu as in queen was spelt cw cwene/cwen

Say these words: cwic, cwifer, becweth, cwell. What are they?

qu had the same sound as cw. (Some say it was a pointless change!)

cwen or cwene queen, cwic quick, cwifer quiver,

becweth bequeath, cwell quell

But many qu words are originally French quality, question, tranquil,


queasy.

French included many words where the sound k was represented by qu


as in quay and picturesque.

www.howtospell.co.uk 25
Medieval Handwriting and the
Consequences Now.

The slanting Medieval handwriting also complicated things.

The slanting letters of u / i (no dot) /m / n /v /w when written


next to each other blended together or looked similar and were
difficult to read.

So to make letters clearer they wrote O instead of i and u but the


sound stayed the same:

v cuman became come still said as /cum/


v wimman became woman /wu man/
v sunu became son /sun/
v wundor became wonder
v lufu became love
v abufan became above

This is why the u sound is written as o in words like wonder,


love, above, cover, dove, glove, some. Notice the o is before v,
n, m. (Some people pronounce the o as o. They see the o and
think it should be pronounced o. Thats fine, all accents accepted
here!)

Notice also the f changed to v. The f was just like the v sound,
but gradually the f changed to a harder sound so the scribes
changed f to v to reflect the softer v sound in speaking (which
is good). But then they had to change the u to o because u was
hard to read next to v!

Confused? Thanks French scribes!

www.howtospell.co.uk 26
-ou- letter pattern

French scribes replaced the Old English u with ou.

This happened because of handwriting again - the u and v looked the


same. The scribes wanted a way to make the U represent a long vowel
sound.

v hus became house

v wund became wound

v ruh became rough (the u became ou and the h became gh!)

v ful became foul

The -ou- letter pattern has different sounds! Read them slowly

and check what sounds they make.

www.howtospell.co.uk 27
The letter C
is no letter at all
The Letter C John Baret 1580.

The letter C is a problem letter that has been talked about over the
centuries.

Its sound can be Q, K (hard c) and S (soft c): cue, can, city.

It also has a different sound with h - ch: cheese but not chorus or
chemist.

Its sometimes pronounced sh with machine, champagne, ocean.

We can have British kerb v American curb, and disc v disk.

Since the 1700s the Q, K, S sounds are or have been used for Islams
holy book from Coran, Koran to now-favoured Quran or Quran.

It can even be silent: muscle, indict, science

The Old English pronounced C with a hard k but then the French
introduced the soft C (s sound).

The French scribes wrote C before i and e instead of S cell, city,


procession, cellar, citizen, grace, reconcile, palace.

Modern words follow this old rule:

A soft c (s) before i, e or y - cinema, decide, celebrate, cemetery,


cybernetics.

A hard c (K) before a, o, u, a consonant, or at the end of words - can,


could, cut, class, public.

bicycle = by/si/kul (both sounds)

Its a good rule but with all rules there are exceptions.

About 74% of words with C are pronounced K


About 22% of words with C are pronounced S

www.howtospell.co.uk 28

Thanks to David Sacks


Fill in the letters that come after C.

A C__nadian woman who has smoked for 95

years has finally dec__ded to give up. Lucy

Cooper announc__d she would c__t out all c__garettes as

she c__lebrated her 105th birthday today. Mrs Cooper has

always c__aimed that she is not addic__ed to tobacc__ and

c__uld stop at any time. Now, she says the time has c__me.

I paid about 10 c__nts for a pac__et when I started, and

look at the pric__ now! We used to smoke in the c__nema

and teachers even smoked in the c__ass, but there arent

many plac__s you c__n smoke in public now. The c__ilings

in my apartment are brown and my c__othes smell. Im

quitting!

Thanks to Johanna Stirling for


this exercise in her great book:
Teaching Spelling to English
Language Learners.

www.howtospell.co.uk 29
The letter C
Answers

A Canadian woman who has smoked for 95 years has finally

decided to give up. Lucy Cooper announced she would cut

out all cigarettes as she celebrated her 105th birthday today.

Mrs Cooper has always claimed that she is not addicted to

tobacco and could stop at any time. Now, she says the time

has come. I paid about 10 cents for a packet when I started,

and look at the price now! We used to smoke in the cinema

and teachers even smoked in the class, but there arent many

places you can smoke in public now. The ceilings in my

apartment are brown and my clothes smell. Im quitting!

www.howtospell.co.uk 30
The Letter G

The French put a silent U in words like guess because in French g


followed by e would sound like j. So gu made it a /k/ sound: guide,
guess, guilty, guard, dialogue...

v gest (Old English) guest


v tunge (Old English) tongue
v vage vague
v voge vogue

The Norman French also bought us the soft g (just like the soft c)

Soft g is soft before e, i, y letters (but not all!) This mainly occurs
in French, Latin, Greek derived words: giant, engine, genius,
gymnasium, gym, gentry, age, edge, page, huge, badge, hedge

Careful! We pronounce a hard g with Old English common words


and from other languages: get, girl, give gecko, gingko, Gideon,
begin, singing, younger, biggest.

Usually its a hard g before a, o, u, or consonants: goal, gate, gut,


guide, great, ghoul, glass...

www.howtospell.co.uk 31
The Letter H

The pronunciation of the letter H can be silent or pronounced depending


on your accent.

For centuries this letter wasnt pronounced much especially when the
words came from French: habit, history, honest, hospital hotel, human.

By the 18th century H began to be pronounced in some words but not


others. H was silent in: habit, harmonious, heritage, heir, herb, honest,
humour and certain other words. Some of these words are now
pronounced with the H.

Words that still have a silent H are of French origin: heir, honest, honour,
hour, herb (in American).

www.howtospell.co.uk 32
Norman vs Saxon Words

Warwick Castle

The Normans lounged on cushions,


on chairs and couches, in mansions and palaces and hostelries, the
Saxons sat on stools, in houses and inns and cottages,
The Normans had their tapestries and carpets in salons and
parlours, the Saxons had their rugs and stoves and sinks in the
kitchens,
The Normans viewed gardens and conservatories, the Saxons
looked out on yards and sheds,
The Normans dined and supped on beef and pork on plates, the
Saxons got the bones to gnaw, in bowls and dishes among the
sheep and cows.

This illustrates perfectly the way that French words reflected the
lifestyle of the Norman upper classes, while the Old English words
belonged to the much poorer conditions of the ordinary English
people of the time.
(Class is still reflected in some of the words even now!)

Thanks to Elaine Miles: English Words and their Spelling

www.howtospell.co.uk 33
Informal and Formal Words

There are many words the French gave us. Do you know the down-to-
earth Anglo-Saxon words of these formal French words? Writers like
George Orwell were big fans of using simple Anglo-Saxon words in
writing and not the big overblown French ones.

French Anglo-Saxon/Old English


deceased dead
obtain get
perspiration
odour
desire
riches
sacred/saintly
marriage
conceal
infant
commence -
aroma
aid
liberty
beef
mutton-
veal
venison-
pork

www.howtospell.co.uk 34
French Anglo-Saxon/Old English
deceased dead
obtain get
perspiration sweat
odour smell
desire want
riches wealth
sacred/saintly holy
marriage wedding
conceal hide
infant child
commence - begin
aroma stench
aid help
liberty freedom
beef ox
mutton- sheep
veal calf
venison- deer
pork pig/swine

www.howtospell.co.uk 35
The Middle Ages: 1066 -1485 (Middle English)

The Middle Ages are also referred to as the Medieval era.

l Britain was multilingual: Latin, French, English coexisted.

l English spelling was a mixture of Old English and French.


Gradually these languages fused together and spelling,
grammar, pronunciation changed to become Middle
English.

l There were hundreds of dialects and regional accents


spoken in Britain and spelling was flexible. Everyone
spelled words how they wanted.

www.howtospell.co.uk 36
Anglo-Saxon, French and Latin Word Choices.

By the 13th Century there was a huge increase in vocabulary because of


French and Latin. This gave us many synonyms (words with same/similar
meanings).

We can see the influence of Anglo-Saxon, French and Latin on the choice
of words we can use today. These words, now, have slightly different
shades of meaning.

Notice how the Latin is quite formal and specific, the French more elegant,
a bit formal, and the Anglo-Saxon informal and down-to-earth.

Anglo-Saxon French Latin

ask question interrogate

fast firm secure

fire flame conflagration

holy sacred consecrated

kingly royal regal

climb -- ascend

clothes attire --

wish desire --

sorrow distress --

forgive pardon condone

law rule canon

hap chance accident

wealth riches opulence

www.howtospell.co.uk 37
Legalese - lawyer speak

During the 13th century, French replaced Latin as the language of law.
Then during the 15th century English was gradually replacing French.
Three languages were competing and lawyers were worried about which
words to use. The precision of words was important - French, Latin or
English?

In many cases, the solution was not to choose but to use two words.
These paired words were used to cover any ambiguity that might arise,
and we still use these Middle English legalese terms:

English / French
goods and chattels
breaking and entering
fit and proper
wrack and ruin

French/ Latin
peace and quiet
final and conclusive

English/Latin
will and testament

The habit became popular and we have:


English/English
have and hold
each and every

French and French


null and void
cease and desist
aid and abet

Thanks to David Crystal www.howtospell.co.uk 38


The Crusades and the Arab influence

During the 1100s and 1200s various crusades to the Holy Land and
the Middle East took place.

There was a constant exchange of ideas and language, and many


words were transformed into English: assassin, divan, arsenal,
kiosk, alcohol, alchemy, sugar, syrup, zero...
suffah - sofa
sukkar - sugar
ghul - ghoul
makhazin - magazine
matrah - mattress
rahat - racket
naranj (aranj)- orange

www.howtospell.co.uk 39
William Caxton and the Printers
1422-1492

Caxton developed the printing press in 1477. He established a


press at Westminster, the first printing press in England. Amongst
the books he printed were Chaucer's 'Canterbury Tales', Gower's
'Confession Amantis' and Malory's 'Le Morte d'Arthur'.

l Caxton and the printers altered spelling. They also spelt


words differently even within a text. They sometimes
added or deleted an e to the end of words (whiche), or
made the spelling up to fit the line. In one single passage
Caxton had booke and boke, axed and axyed. He
sometimes doubled letters when he wanted hadde.

l Caxton lived many years in Flemish countries and


introduced the Flemish way of spelling words with a gh:
ghost, ghastly, (and even gherle (girl) and ghoos (goose)
which were both later dropped.)

l He also encouraged the influence of French by replacing


original words to French-derived ones.

Some writers complained about the disastrous effect of French on


the English language, and the influence of fashionable Latin on
spellings.

www.howtospell.co.uk 40
It was expensive to keep changing spellings so the printers
fixed words in the way that suited them.

Some of the printers were Dutch and would spell words the
Dutch way. An example of this was yacht. It was yott before
it was altered.

But this was a time when speaking was changing and printers
sometimes used the old spellings of words like would, should,
night and bright. These became the standard spellings and we
struggle with them today!

l The notion of correct spelling began to grow.

l Spelling was more stable than pronunciation.

l The process of standardizing the spelling was


underway but it was going to be another three
centuries before it became fixed.

www.howtospell.co.uk 41
By 1500 English had become the official language of court and the King.

Henry V was the first king since the Norman Conquest to use English
regularly in his official writings.

But the influence of French, Latin and Greek on English was still increasing.
The academics and scribes kept the original spellings of these borrowed
words, and this increased our stock of weird spellings.

www.howtospell.co.uk 42
The Great Vowel Shift

Unfortunately, printing and dictionaries were published


during a period known as the Great Vowel Shift.
Between 1450 and 1750 many vowel and consonant
sounds changed or disappeared. No one seems to
know why this happened.

A lot of letters became silent but the spellings were already fixed.

l The l in should and would used to be said. Then people


eventually stopped saying it. But an l was added to coude
(could), although it didnt have one before, so it matched would
and should.

l The l in words like half and calf became silent.

l The final n in damn, hymn, autumn became silent.

l The gh guttural sound in right, light, cough changed to f or


became silent.

l The w in wr- words write, wrist, wrath, wreak... became


silent.

l The g and k in knee, know, gnat became silent.

l The pronunciation of e at the end of some words like name,


stone, fine stopped and became silent. Name used to be
pronounced as two syllables to rhyme with farmer. Life used to
be pronounced like leaf.

police and polite dont have the same i sound because polite is an old
word and its i sound changed in the Vowel Shift. But police is a new
word so never changed sounds.

www.howtospell.co.uk 43
Academics and Troublesome Silent Letters

The academics of the Renaissance (16th century) were enthusiastic about


Latin and wanted to imitate some Latin spellings to give English spellings
more authority. So they shoved in those troublesome silent letters!

v Doubt is a mix of Old French (doute) and Latin (dubitare) -


silent b dowt

v Debt is from the Latin debitum - silent b det

v Subtle is from the Latin subtilem - silent b su tul

v Receipt is a combination of Anglo/Norman French (receite)


and Latin (recepta) - silent p re seet

v Scissors was sisoures but then a c was added because of


the Latin (scindere) to split. siss as

v Salmon was samon then they added the silent l to show its
classical roots. silent l sa mon

These words were originally logically spelt before the academics messed
about with them and messed things up!

They tidied up spellings but also messed up spellings. They sometimes


increased the number of irregular forms: the Old English gh of night and
light was added to/extended to delight and tight.

These academics also made mistakes which we live with today:

v Island??! Why is there an S when we dont pronounce it? Island


was an Old English word iland or yland. The scholars stuck a 's' in
there believing it came from the Latin word (insula) and French
(isle).

www.howtospell.co.uk 44
William Shakespeare

1564 to 1616

Shakespeare made fun of this obsession with changing words to Latin and
called it abominable.

Shakespeare was the greatest inventor of words giving us about 800


permanent additions to our vocab. He was especially good at compound
words (putting two words together to make one): countless, courtship,
barefaced, eyesore, tongue-tied, lackluster...

With some words were not sure if he actually invented them or if they
were already around in the spoken language. Words like excellent, lonely,
frugal, critical and horrid, first appeared in his work.

Stratford upon Avon

Thanks Larry Beason Eyes before Ease

www.howtospell.co.uk 45
Magic e Silent e

e
a letter of marvellous use in the
writing of our tongue

Richard Mulcaster 1582

In 1582 the scholar Richard Mulcaster wrote about putting an e on to


the ends of words and how it would make the vowel before it change its
sound. He said that the e could help our spelling system.

Adding an e to short vowel sound words elongates the vowel sound


and makes it go from a short vowel sound - cap - to a long vowel sound
- cape.

pet - Pete
hop - hope
mat - mate
tap - tape
hug - huge
sit - site
us - use
win - wine
fat - fate
cap - cape
sit - site
at - ate

*But this rule doesnt apply to every word: some / have /love / give
are all still short vowel sounds. be/bee are the same long vowel sound!

No English words end in v or u. Theres always an e on the end:


give, have, eve, twelve, glue, true, rescue...

No English words end in j. The sound is made by -dge or -ge: badge,


bridge, hedge, marriage, age...

Thanks to Anne Betteridge,


David Sacks, and Basic Skills Agency
www.howtospell.co.uk 46
18th 19th 20th 21st Centuries

The expansion of the British Empire brought words from America,


India, Australia, New Zealand, Africa and China, and strange
spellings: pecan, ketchup, prairie, bungalow, polo, junk, kangaroo,
kiwi, safari...

Taking an interest in words is a great way to learn,


remember and love words and spellings.

Can you guess where these words come from?

1. bungalow
2. verandah
3. ketchup
4. galore
5. alcohol
6. guru
7. shampoo
8. robot

Clues
India (Hindi), China (Cantonese), Irish, Arabic,
Czech

www.howtospell.co.uk 47
Answers
1. bungalow from Hindi bagl 'belonging to Bengal', from a type of
cottage built for early European settlers in Bengal

2. verandah or veranda- from Hindi vara, from Portuguese


varanda 'railing, balustrade'

3. ketchup from Chinese Cantonese dialect tomato juice.

4. galore from Irish go leor, literally 'to sufficiency'

5. alcohol from Arabic al-kul 'the kohl'. In early use the term
referred to powders, specifically kohl, and especially those obtained
by distilling or rectifying spirits

6. guru - from Hindi and Punjabi, from Sanskrit guru 'weighty,


grave' (compare with Latin gravis), hence 'elder, teacher'

7. shampoo from Hindi cpo! 'press!'

8. robot from Czech, from robota 'forced labour'

thanks to www.oxforddictionaries.com

www.howtospell.co.uk 48
Samuel Johnson and Dictionaries
1709-1784

Weve been writing English for about 1500 years but the spelling only
became fixed about 250 years ago when Samuel Johnsons dictionary
was published in 1755. It was a trusted, relied on, standard reference
guide for hundreds of years. But some of his original spellings in his
dictionary changed.

He decided to use the -our and -re endings for colour (not color)
and centre (not center). He chose the French spelling (colour) and
not the Latin (color). But for centre he chose the Old French, or from
Latin centrum, from Greek kentron.

The other great dictionary man, Noah Webster (American dictionary),


decided to use the -or and -er endings for American spellings:
colour/color, honour/honor, flavour/flavor, labour/labor, behaviour/
behavior, neighbour/neighbor, and -er for centre/center, sombre/
somber, theatre/theater, centimetre/centimeter, litre/liter...

English is a growing, changing language even now. Hundreds of


words are added to the English dictionary every year. Words drop out
of favour, slang becomes the norm and language changes.

With texting and emails, Internet and computers who knows what
spelling changes will happen over the next few centuries!

www.howtospell.co.uk 49
American English vs British English

Noah Webster
1758 -1843

With the Declaration of Independence in 1776 Americans wanted to


proclaim their differences from Britain and one way was to reform
spelling. Noah Webster led the way.

But his radical spelling reforms had little support and he only
managed a few changes.

In 1828 Webster published his American English dictionary

-our to -or - colour to color.

-re to -er - centre to center.

-ise to -ize - realise to realize (-ize is the older, British version


and was changed to -ise because of French influence)

-yse to -yze - analyse to analyze

-ogue to -og or -ogue - dialogue to dialogue or dialog

-ence to -ense - -defence to defense

No doubling of the final l travelling to traveling

In most cases American words have fewer letters. (Well see this in
the next exercise.)

American English retains some words that had fallen out of


use in British English gotten and fall for autumn.

www.howtospell.co.uk 50
American vs British Spellings

Lets have a look at the differences between some American and


British spellings.

Both American and British writers tend to get confused about which
spelling to use.

Do you know the British spellings for these American spellings?

American British differences


write a check

cozy
donut
draftsman
roadside curb
licorice
program
maneuver
mustache
omelet
plow
pajamas
sulfur
tire
gray
specialty
yogurt

www.howtospell.co.uk 51
American vs British Spelling

American British differences


check cheque
cozy cosy
donut doughnut
draftsman draughtsman
roadside curb kerb
licorice liquorice
program programme
maneuver manoeuvre
mustache moustache
omelet omelette
plow plough
pajamas pyjamas
sulfur sulphur
tire tyre
gray grey
specialty speciality
yogurt yoghurt

www.howtospell.co.uk 52
Technology

l The 20th Century technological revolution brought thousands


of new words to English, and were often based on Latin and
Greek: telephone, computer, aerospace, micro-organism,
microchip...

l There are some words that have half Greek and half Latin
origins television and antiterrorist - they comprise of first
half Greek, second half Latin. Mobile phone and sub zero are
first half Latin and second half Greek.

l Loan words with foreign spellings, or slightly modified,


continue to make English spelling a big challenge: Cajun,
intifada, perestroika, chlamydia...

l Computer and technology are bringing in new words into


English every year: laptop, email, Internet, to google, to
tweet, social media, texting...

www.howtospell.co.uk 53
The Influence of Greek

Scientific discoveries brought more new


words into English, many based on Greek,
and are usually difficult words to spell like
ache and rhythm.

A lot of Greek-derived words are used for


healthcare: radiologist, osteopath, chemist,
psychiatrist, physiotherapist, tonic, clinic,
chronic...

Greek influences include:


l the hard ch /k/ in chemistry, anarchy, ache,
stomach ache...
l a middle y in analyse, rhythm, hymn...
l ph for /f/ in photo, graph, phone...
l silent p in psychology, pneumonia...

www.howtospell.co.uk 54
More Weird and Wonderful
Spellings

www.howtospell.co.uk 55
Past Tenses

Have you ever wondered why we have some strange past tense
spellings?

We have the regular, easy spellings:


I watch, I watched, Ive watched.

But then we have these irregular forms:


I eat, I ate, Ive eaten
see, saw, seen
sing, sang, sung
ring, rang, rung
write, wrote, written
freeze, froze, frozen
bite, bit, bitten
hide, hid, hidden

There are about 60+ odd verbs and these come from our
Scandinavian/Viking roots and not from French or Latin.

There used to be about 350 of these irregular forms but they


eventually became regular.

Even now people are changing the way we say them:


people sometimes say I sung for I sang (should be Ive sung)

or I rung the bell for I rang the bell (should be Ive rung.)

Languages always change and evolve!

Thanks to Gena K. Gorrell


www.howtospell.co.uk 56
Silent Letters

Silent Letters
more than 60% of English words
have silent letters in them.

Silent letters are there for a reason and not just to mess with your brain!
Lets look at these reasons and some of the patterns and rules.

Remember - most silent letters we see in words used to be pronounced but


then overtime we stopped saying them but the spelling was set and so we left
the spelling as it was. So the spellings reflect how we used to say the words
centuries ago!

We also can see the history and origins of the word in some spellings:
l Can you remember why theres a silent k and g in knee, knock,
gnaw?
l What about the silent b in plumber, debt and doubt?
l What about the silent gh?
l Why did the academics put an s in island?

Can you remember?


Some silent letters are the fossilized remains (like dinosaurs) of a once spoken
letter.

A lot of silent letters help the reader to distinguish between homophones


(same sound but different spelling and meaning):
be/bee, know/no, to,too,two/ whole/hole...

Or they help us work out the meaning and pronunciation (but remain silent):
sin/sign, rat/rate, tap/tape...

www.howtospell.co.uk 57
A few silent letter rules:

'k' is often silent before 'n' - knee, know, knuckle, knock...

'w' is often silent before 'r' - write, wrist, wrong, wrap...

'g' is often silent before 'n' - gnat, gnaw, gnash, gnarl...

'p' is often silent before 's' - psychic, psalm, psychology,


psychiatry...

'l' is often silent before 'k' - folk, walk, talk, yolk...

'b' is often silent after 'm' - plumber, numb, dumb, bomb,


comb, climb, thumb...

'n' is often silent after 'm' - autumn, column, solemn,


hymn...

't' is often silent after 's' - listen, fasten, glisten, castle...

Using the above rules complete these words:

1. Britain is __nown for its royal family.


2. Reading and _riting are so important.
3. ___rap up warm for winter.
4. __nives, forks and spoons are collectively __nown as cutlery.
5. Fas__ten your seatbelts
6. I like autum__.
7. My hands are num___ with the cold.
8. Add up the colum__ of figures.

Watch out for my silent letter Answers.


pronunciation v spelling video and 1. known 2. writing 3. wrap
workbook coming soon. 4. knives/known 5. fasten 6. autumn
7. numb 8. column

www.howtospell.co.uk 58
Plurals

Anglo-Saxon plural forms were a bit complicated but thanks to the Vikings
things became much simpler.

The simplest way to make a plural is adding -s:


(a computer) some computers

But we still retain the strange -en plural form from our history.
Look at these Old English words:
children, oxen, brethren, men, women

We also retain some irregular plural forms and these are usually related
to every day objects.

(a tooth) some teeth


(a goose) some geese
(a man) some men
(a woman) women
(a mouse) mice
(a louse) lice

The -ce endings come from the French, and a lot of Modern English
spelling take this ending. (It makes it a harder voiced sound).

once (Old English ones)


twice (Old English twies) = two times
thrice = three times

mice
lice

www.howtospell.co.uk 59
will not / wont
Why dont we write the short form of will not to willnt?

We write will not as wont.

Will comes from Old English wyllan, related to Dutch willen and German wollen.

Depending on their region and dialect some English people used will /will not
and some used woll /woll not (look at the German wollan)

We also had wynnot, woonot, wo not, went and willnt

Woll not was also contracted down to wonnot in the 16th Century, and from
there to wont.

So we have two dialects mixed together! Will and wont.

Thanks to Larry Beasons Eyes before Ease


and the Oxford Dictionary online

www.howtospell.co.uk 60
Ch- Letter Pattern and Pronunciation

ch- is an example of a letter pattern that never changed its pronunciation or


spelling when we borrowed words spelled with it. So when we borrowed the
words from other languages we kept the spelling and pronunciation!

French words with the ch are pronounced sh - champagne, chef, chaperon,


chauffeur, brochure, chalet, chateau, chic, moustache, nonchalant,

Italian words with ch are pronounced k - Chianti, gnocchi...

Greek words - ch words are pronounced k - stomach, chaos, chemist, chorus,


technology, monarch, ache, archaeology, architecture, archaic, bronchitis,
character, charismatic, chemical, chlorine, cholera, chorus, Christian, chrome,
school, echo ...

The traditional ch sound is made in about 62% of words - chair, cheese,


chestnut, cheers...

k for ch is made in about 26% of words - chemist, stomach, chaos...

sh for ch is made in about 12% of words - champagne, chef...

Thanks Larry Beason

www.howtospell.co.uk 61
Word Families/Letter Patterns Linked by Meaning

As weve seen we cant rely on saying the word to help us


spell it. Only about 50% of words are phonetically regular to
be able to spell them like they sound. So to really help us spell we have
to use our eyes to see what looks right.

Reading won't help most people with spelling, but reading helps when
you actively and consciously start to really look at words, study them,
see the shape, the look of words, notice letter patterns, word families,
and know how words are made up with prefixes and suffixes (those are
the beginnings and endings of words).

Most adults can spell tens of thousands of words not because they
memorise them but because they memorise patterns, they understand
and know common letter patterns.

One great way to improve your spelling and confidence is to notice letter
patterns when theyre linked by meaning. Look at these word families:

sign signal- signature

ear hear hearing - heard


here there where - everywhere nowhere - thereabouts

real reality really unrealistic realise realisation

www.howtospell.co.uk 62
Many people wonder why the number 2 (two) is spelt the way it is and
why the w is silent. We can explain it visually by looking at the words in
the tw- word family/letter pattern.

two twice twelve twenty - between twins twist

Notice theyre all related to two in some way. But the pronunciation is
different! Its about the pattern not the sound.

We can also use our knowledge of the history of English to understand


why theres a w in two. In Old English/Anglo-Saxon they had w in the
spelling, tw, and most likely pronounced it similar to the Dutch, twee,
and German, zwei, then it became silent. So keeping the w in there
shows us the history of the word.

One and once are problem words because theyre pronounced with a /w/
but the other members of the word family with the letter pattern on
arent.

one once only none alone - lonely

The /w/ sound was added to one and once in popular speech somewhere
between 1150 - 1476 (Middle English period) and became standard in the
17th Century. Many academics didnt like this /w/ pronunciation and
thought it barbarous.

www.howtospell.co.uk 63
Lets look at some more word families:

-ject- (from Latin- throw)


reject (throw away!)
rejection
projection (to throw light on something!)
projectile
dejection
objection
adjective (to throw light on nouns!)
injection

Sign (from Latin signum to mark, indicate, symbol)

Thanks to Joy Pollock &


Johanna Stirling www.howtospell.co.uk 64
terr- (from Latin terra for earth, land, ground)
terrain
territory
subterranean
Mediterranean
extraterrestrial

miss (from Latin for send)


submission
dismissal
permission
mission
submission
emission

val (related to worth or strength from Latin valere)


value
equivalent
invalidate
evaluate
valuation

ped (from Latin for foot)


pedal
pedestrian
pedicure
expedition

-rupt (from Latin for broken)


rupture
interrupt
disruption
eruption
bankrupt
corrupt
abrupt

www.howtospell.co.uk 65
-le and -el endings

*Several hundred words spell their final syllable with -LE (little, people,
cycle, middle, table, bottle, bubble, able, noble, pickle, bundle, whistle,
castle...)

Many of these words like little and middle come from Anglo Saxon/Old English
and used to be written -EL (littel, middel), and pronounced with the stress on
the -EL.

Old English words like littel and middel became little and middle because of
the French influence. The pronunciation then changed and fell on the first
syllable just like the other -LE words.

*Nearly a hundred words end with -EL (angel, level, model, tunnel, panel,
camel, cancel...) These words derive from Latin or French and the
pronunciation stress is on the first syllable.

People is a difficult spelling because of the silent o. Lets look at its history:
Latin > populum
Old French > poeple
Middle English > peple, ( and sometimes spelt: pepel, pepil, pepul, pepyl. But
those printers preferred the French -LE ending!)

Modern English > people (The o was probably put in people to reflect the
Latin origin.)

Most of the -LE spellings originate from words that are Latin:

Latin Old English Modern English


battalia battel battle
capitalem catel cattle
castellum castel castle
gentilis genteel/gentile gentle
boticulam botel bottle

*Thanks to Upward and Davidson & Joy Pollock


www.howtospell.co.uk 66
History of English Spelling Timeline

(Approximate dates)

BC
By 400 BC the Celts had settled here. They spoke Celtic.

From 55 BC the Romans came to check Britain out.

AD
In 43 AD the Romans finally invaded and colonised Britain. They spoke Latin.
Ruling Celtic tribes adopted Latin as a second language.

In 410 AD the Romans left Britain.

From 410 AD northern European tribes invaded Britain - Angles, Saxons, Jutes.
They spoke a number of Germanic languages which became known as the
Anglo-Saxon language. The 100 most common words we use today are from
Anglo-Saxon.

From 793 AD the Vikings (Norsemen or Danes) invaded Britain. They spoke
Old Norse. Over the next 250 years Old Norse and Anglo-Saxon combined.

By the 11th century Old English developed from Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse
with a rich tradition of literature.

1066 The Norman French invaded Britain. They spoke Norman French.
English was only spoken by the lower classes and stopped being written.
(Norman scribes complicated spelling when they introduced their own ways of
spelling and changed many Old English words to fit their spelling system.)

12th century Crusaders introduced many Arabic words into English.

By the 13th century Sermons, prayers and carols began to be written in


English again. The language had changed and is called Middle English.

1400s English was the official language of England again.

1476 William Caxton set up the first printing press. Printing began to fix
spellings. It was a time of pronunciation changes (Great Vowel Shift) but the
the printers still used the old spellings (and the gap between how we say a
word and how we write it widened).

www.howtospell.co.uk 67
16th century Renaissance scholars introduced words and spellings from Latin
and Greek (to further complicate spelling).

1600s England began gaining power in India and with it bought hundreds of
words into English with it strange spellings - bungalow, veranda, juggernaut,
pundit, chintz, dinghy...

1607 English settlers established the first colony in America - Jamestown

17th-19th centuries The British Empire expanded and introduced words from
all parts of the world from America, India, Australia, New Zealand, Africa and
China - ketchup, kiwi, kangaroo, prairie, chutney...

Also scientific discoveries brought new words into the language based on Greek
and Latin.

1755 Samuel Johnson published his dictionary

1828 Noah Webster published his American English dictionary

20th century technology brought thousands of words into English, often based
on Latin and Greek: telephone, computer, aerospace, nuclear...

Late 20th/early 21st century the Internet has brought and keeps bringing in
new words into English.

Language periods (approximate)

Old English/Anglo Saxon (5th Century 1150)


Middle English (1150 1476)
Early Modern English (1476 1660)
Modern English (1476 present)

www.howtospell.co.uk 68
Answers to Quiz

1. What language did the Romans speak? Latin

2. What did the Romans name Britain? Britannia

3. Which tribe of people did the English come from? Angles and
Saxons

4. What name did the Anglo-Saxons give England? Angle-land

5. Why is there a silent k and g in know, knock, gnaw, gnat? The g


and k used to be pronounced but not now. We leave them in the
spelling to see the history of the word.

6. Which country did the Normans come from? France

7. What famous date did they invade Britain? 1066

8. Why is -gh silent or pronounced with a f? We dont know why

some are silent and some are pronounced.

9. Why do we pronounce come, son, woman with a u? Because of


medieval handwriting. The u look similar to other letters like m and
n so they changed it to o.

10. Why are there so many words that mean the same thing or very
similar? Because of Latin, French and Anglo-Saxon words that
were all used in England.

www.howtospell.co.uk 69
Summary Map

Thanks to Johanna Stirling

www.howtospell.co.uk 70
Conclusion

English is the memory of thousands of


years of history.
English is the result of thousands of years of military and cultural
conquests. Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Vikings, Normans, academics, printers,
writers, scientists, inventors all added to the mix of words and rules. And
still are!

English spelling seems strange and inconsistent but its not there to give
you a headache. Its the result of a living, vibrant, forever moving
language. English has words from languages so old that we barely know
they existed... More than 70% of all English words were born someplace
other than England.

Hopefully, you have a better understanding of why English spelling is the


way it is and now youll begin to love it and enjoy using different words.

Let me know.

If you have any questions


please contact me at
[email protected]

(Thanks to Gena K. Gorrell for the perfect


quotes above.)

www.howtospell.co.uk 71
What youve learnt

Thats the end of the history bit.

Lets look at what youve learnt:


l you know the history of English spelling and why its made
English spelling the way it is with all its quirks and
strangeness,

l you can see the logic in the English spelling system and feel
more confident about it, because you know about letter
patterns, word families, silent letters and their rules and
why theyre there,

l you know why you cant rely on pronunciation for spelling,


and how pronunciation changed over the centuries but
spelling didnt,

l you know who caused our spelling problems (scribes,


printers, academics),

l your vocabulary has improved and you know why there are
so many words that mean the same thing or similar,
because of the influence of Latin, French, Anglo-Saxon,
plus borrowed words from other languages.

And knowing all this means you feel happier about spelling, your
confidence as improved and you respect and love English
spelling!

www.howtospell.co.uk 72
How to improve your spelling

As your knowledge of words


increases, your confidence in learning
improves, your ability to use a
dictionary develops and your memory
bank of words grow larger, you will start
being able to predict likely spelling
patterns or feel able to learn whole
groups of words at once, and learning
and remembering spellings will become
easier for YOU.

(Basic Skills Agency The Spelling Pack)

Remember - you have to keep writing and spelling to improve

spelling. Keep working on your spelling. Do the spelling test

podcasts on my spelling blog.

Keep using the Look, Say, Cover, Write method (check the

video), and use spelling strategies and memory tricks (check the

video).

www.howtospell.co.uk 73
*Remember, others can help you improve your spelling. They can give you
information; initially they can help you identify your errors; they can show
you techniques for learning, but after that its really all up to you.

Dont let your lack of confidence in spelling put you off writing.

*Writing is for all of us. So join in. And it really does help spelling.

www.howtospell.co.uk 74
Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements and thanks to the following people and their


excellent books: (check out their books on the Amazon links below)

David Crystal: The English Language/Words Words Words/


Encyclopaedia of the English Language/ The Stories of English (click
here for more about his books)

Johanna Stirling : Teaching Spelling to English Language Learners.


(Click here Amazon to check out this brilliant book)

Gena K. Gorrell: Say What? The Weird and Mysterious Journey of the
English Language (Tundra Books - Click here)
Anne Betteridge : Adult Learners Guide to Spelling (Chambers- click
here) .
Larry Beason: Eyes before Ease (McGraw Hill - click here )

David Sacks : The Alphabet (Arrow Books - click here)

Joy Pollock : Signposts to Spelling (Blessings - Click here)


Elaine Miles : English words and their spelling (Whurr - click here)

Christopher Upward & George Davidson: The History of English Spelling


(Wiley-Blackwell - click here)
www.oxforddictionaries.com
Basic Skills Agencys Spelling Pack.

If you want to know more about the history and development of English
then I recommend two entertaining, enlightening books:
The Adventure of English by Melvyn Bragg (click here)
Mother Tongue by Bill Bryson (click here)

Joanne Rudling 2012

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, without


prior permission.

Every reasonable effort has been by me to trace the copyright owners of material quoted
or illustrations used in this ebook. Any omissions or errors should be notified to
[email protected]. I will rectify the situation immediately.

www.howtospell.co.uk 75
www.howtospell.co.uk

Subscribe to my website, www.howtospell.co.uk , and get


great spelling lessons straight to your inbox with links to my
spelling blog for podcasts spelling tests and pronunciation-
http://spellingblog.howtospell.co.uk/

www.howtospell.co.uk 76
Spelling Strategies Video

Youve now learnt all about the history of English spelling to


help you improve your spelling. Now take the next step...

Do you kick yourself when you want to spell a word that


sums up how you feel and you cant spell it?

Good spellers use strategies like memory tricks to help


remember difficult spellings

Ive got a great video all about how to learn and remember
difficult words using spelling strategies like memory tricks
and syllable breakdown. www.howtospell.co.uk

www.howtospell.co.uk 77

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