Those of you who have watched a spelling competition know what a nerve-wracking experience it can be, both for the participants and audience. I, for one, am really awestruck by the calm and poise with which children face the mic to spell words that most of us can’t spell.
Yes, I couldn’t spell many of these words when I was their age and I still can’t spell some of them. And I have also conveniently forgotten the spellings of a few since the arrival of spellcheck. It is my weakness at spellings that makes me admire spelling bee participants even more.
makes me admire spelling bee participants even more.
There is justification for spellings being so confusing and difficult to many people. English orthography, or the English spelling system, is no doubt confusing, despite the many rules that govern it. One of the reasons is that there are exceptions to these rules which allow the spellings of various words to deviate from the rules. In such cases, language experts say that it is easier and more effective to remember the exceptions. And the other main reason is the inconsistencies in English language word pronunciation, all thanks to a system of phonetics that school children today perhaps understand better than I do because they are introduced to it while I wasn’t.
Interestingly, even native speakers also find English spellings difficult and the rules confusing. For instance, the Irish playwright and critic George Bernard Shaw was a strong critic of English language and spelling rules, so much so that when he died in 1950, he left money in his will for the development of a new phonemic alphabet.
He famously made his point against the rules by claiming that the word ‘fish’ should be spelled as ‘ghoti’ — gh for /f/, as in cough; o for /i/, as in women; and ti for /sh/, as in nation.
English is a language that has incorporated a lot of different influences over the years and absorbed many foreign words into it. So knowing the root or origin of a word is also helpful in getting its spelling right. Besides this, there are many ways to improve spellings, some technical and some simple things that people do all the time.
So let’s look at what these ways are. Who knows, maybe next year you too can take part in Dawn’s Spelling Bee competition and emerge a winner!
Learn the rules and their exceptions
Yes, we have to go the old-fashioned way first by learning the rules of spellings in English. Ok, I know, this is hard and boring — but you can at least try to learn and identify common patterns and combinations of letters that can help you in getting the spelling of a word right.
Among the key rules that helped me were those related to silent letters, because they are the most baffling for me. For instance when the letter ‘k’ is paired up with ‘n’ at the beginning of a word, the ‘k’ is not pronounced, e.g. ‘knife’, ‘knight’, ‘know’, and ‘knee’.
Exceptions to the rules are fewer, so it is easier to learn the spelling of the few words that don’t follow the rules.