| ... |
Understanding
Traditional Spelling
There is not subsitute for a good visual memory
and memorizing the dictionary but these concepts may make English spelling
more understandable. English has quite a few orthographic options
which make it much more difficult than a writing system that has only two
options. There are an average of 14 different ways to spell each
sound in English. Fortunately, five of these ways account for
85% of the spellings we are likely to encounger. A good reform proposal
would be to simply eliminate the rare odd spelling.
|
Consonant
Regularities in the Traditional Writing System
|
Single
Consonant Spelling Alternatives (idea from McGuinness,
p. 103)
Different ways the consonant
sound is spelled at the beginning and end of words.
These are not all the options.
Unlike the traditional orthography, Truespel always spells the same sound
the same way
magic e
endings usually indicate a long vowel: exceptions have, give, ...
|
sound
|
key word
|
word beginning
|
word ending
|
Ref |
b
d
f
g
h [silent in some words]
j
k
l [can be semi-vowel]
m [can be semi-vowel]
n [can be semi-vowel]
ng
p
r [can be semi-vowel]
s
sh
t
v
w hw [semi-vowel]
x [ks, gs, sh/ch/s]
y [semi-vowel]
z |
boot, bib, tribe
dog, did, mode
fun, fife, enough
got, gig, guage
hot, who, casbah
job, judge, gem
kick, cold, arctic
log, till, little
man, comb, column
not, knot, gnome
sing
pig, pip, pipe
red, write, rare
sat, fence [confess]
show, hush,
tot, tote, debt
van, valve
win, when,
tax, xerox, Xena
yell, yacht
zip, size, fizz |
b
d
f ph
g gu gh gu
h wh (hw)
j g
c k ch
l
m
n kn gn
--
p
r wr ur
s c sc
sh, ch
t
v
w wh
-- [foreign names]
y
z, x |
b, be
d de
f ff ph gh fe
g gue gg ge
-- silent terminal
ge dge
k ck ic ke
l ll el le
m mb mn
n gn foreign ne
ng
p pe
r er re
ce se ss s
sh [c in Saxon]
t bt ght te
v ve
-- [ ow is a vowel]
x
-no consonant endings
s se ze zz z |
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21 |
ch [tsh] [-k]
ng
qu [kw]
sh
sch [sk-] [-sh]
S'n [shun]
th [t, tth]
th [d, dh, d, x] |
chin machine watch
singer/finger, bank
quit, queen
shop, lush
school
illusion, suspicion
thin, breath [bretth]
then, breathe |
ch
-- [Eng, Ing]
qu
sh ch x
sch, sk
--
th
th d |
ch tch
ng
--
sh
-
sion, cion, tion
th
th the dth |
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29 |
silent h
silent w,
w as vowel |
honor, Allah
who, write, wren
- /u/ short u sound |
h silent
w silent
- Welsh w [bwk] |
h silent marker
low [silo] snow
wow, cow, |
30
31
32 |
The most likely spelling alternative
listed first above. More on silent letters
The options eliminated by
most reform notations are in bold face.
4. guage should be spelled
gage or gaje. [gaej]. the gu in guilty is to keep it from going
soft but this does not apply to guage: gage would still be hard.
The ge ending does two things, it softens [unvoices] the g and modifies
the a-vowel.
|
The
Phonological Structure of English and the Traditional Writing System
|
Any
orthographic system for English should have a unique grapheme [symbol]
for most of the 12 pure vowels and the important combinations of vowel
phonemes [ei ai au ou...]. The sounds that Daniel
Jones considered to be essential for a
full description of English speech are listed below.
According to Harry Lindgren,
many proposed reform notations for English fail by not having a unique
symbol for schwa.
Schwa [an unstressed mid lax vowel] is one of the most frequent sounds
in English speech. Roughly 10% of your utterances are [uhs] or schwas.
Lindgren considered this oversight to be sufficient to eliminate the proposed
notation from serious consideration.
Lindgren's system had both
u
/^/ and schwa ['].
Many systems will merge these phonemes. Truespel uses u for
both, Spanglish uses a for both.
Since Truespel always marks stress, it is easy to determine if the u
is stressed or unstressed. Thus, Truespel
does have a way of referencing the schwa [or mid lax vowel] sound.
up about = /^p 'baut/
= up ubbout. Spanglish [upp about] or [ap abaut]. [upp] is
stressed as in upper.
In British English (RP)
there are 46 different speech sounds: 21 vowels, 25
consonants (Wijk, p. 13). According to Longman's Dictionary of
American English, General American [GA] has 45 speech sounds [21 v
24 c]. Longman's GA merges [a:] and [o]. [see how
many phonemes?]
By showing stress, Truespel
is able to eliminate the /^ '/
distinction, reducing the number to 43. Truespel
does not differentiate between singer and fingger, the vowel in
her and other, the long and short /turned c/ -both would
be spelled [au].
Sixty
symbols are normally used to represent the vowels. Unfortunately,
some are used for more than one sound. Most
symbols in TO are polyvalent or multi-valued. The codes overlap.
For instance, there are
29 ways to represent the sound
/u:/ and 18 ways to represent the sound /ei/.
| 60
V-Markers found in TO: a, e, i, y, o,
u, ar, er, ir, yr, or, ur, aa, ae, ai, ay, au, aw, ea, ee, ei, ey, eu,
ew, ie, ye, oa, oe, oi, oy, oo, ou, ow, ue, ui, uy, aer, air, ayr, ear,
eer, eir, eyr, eur, ew(e)r, iar, ier, yer, oar, oor, our, ow(e)r, uer,
igh, aigh, augh, eigh, ough. |
In TO, 44 symbols
are used to represent 25 consonants: 21 single letters + 23
digraphs and trigraphs. The 23 combined symbols are shown below:
| 23
Marked consonants: ch, dg, gh,
gn, gu, ng, ph, qu, sc, sch, sh, si, ssi, sci, ti, ci, ce, tch, th, wh,
xc, and zi. (ci,
si, and zi are used for /sh/ and /zh/). |
To represent 46 phonemes,
English traditionally uses 104 different unigraphs, digraphs, and
trigraphs. Some are used more than once.
The most serious problem
with the tradtional English orthography is its lack of predictability.
The chances that one can spell an unfamiliar word is 50% OR LESS.
This estimate is based on the fact that no phonemic notation will match
TO more than 50% of the time. The best attempt is about 40%.
Code overlaps are much more
serious than using more than one letter or combination to represent a sound.
Code overlap refers to the tendency for TO to use the same letter or combination
to represent more than one phoneme. Each letter can refer to about 14different
sounds. The letters in TO
are multi-valued or polyvalent. (i.e., chaotic
and confusing as opposed to alphabetic)
Educators intent on teaching
spelling and reading generally discard wh as a distinct phoneme,
and make a few simplifications.
| From
Traditional spelling |
To
Truespel |
|
25 consonants
|
44 symbols
|
200+ spellings
|
23 consonants
|
23 spellings
|
|
21 vowels
|
60 symbols
|
300+ spellings
|
17 vowels
|
17 spellings
|
|
46
phonemes
|
104
symbols
|
500+
spellings
|
42*
phonemes
|
40
spellings
|
*Truespel adds 3 sounds by marking
stress: schwa, schwa + R, and schwi [unstressed ee]
Orton
phonograms bibliography
Truespel and Spanglish
asciibets [askee-bets] are used to indicate sound values below
The basic code:
Each phoneme represented by only one letter or digraph
From sound to spelling.
25
consonants in English speech - 50 spellings in written English
23
pure consonants, j and ch are combinations
24 Consonant Phonemes
[ng
missing from both TO and Truespel]
with one
spelling by position
b d h l p t v ng qu sh
th tth |
with one
dominant spelling pattern
f g j
k m n r s w x z ch |
The z phoneme is generally
spelled with an s. z is dominant only in the initial
position
26 spelling alternatives
for 12 consonants plus 73 consonant clusters - 99
Truespel and Phonemic Spanglish
notations are used to clarify the following vowel sounds:
18
vowels have over 50
spellings in the traditional writing system - only 18
in Truespel
Truespel
recognizes yue
as a combination of a consonant and a vowel
18 Vowel Phonemes [two
phonemes are merged her/er and o/o:]
| truespel
a i aar oi |
e
aa u ee ae ie oe
yue aw oo ue ou er or |
| spanglish
.
a.
i. ar oy |
e
o. 'u i ei
ai o' yu o
u. u au
'r or |
| spanglish.ae
y aar oy |
e
aa
v i ei ai ow
yu o w u
ou r or |
Spanglish requires diacritics
or markers to become a phonemic notation. The alternative of recruiting
r y w v as vowels [3rd line] can be visually disruptive McGuinnes
(1997), as above, ignores the schwa sound and most R-combinations.
32 spellings for 14 vowel
sounds must be taught in TO (but not in a phonemic alphabet)
e.g., /ou/ -
tone, goat, told, low, though, obey, owe,
oh
Span - to'n
go't to'ld lo' tho'
o'bey o'
[o' alternate ow]
Truespel
toen goet toeld loe thoe
oebae oe
21 code overlaps must be
taught for TO, e.g., ou is associated with over 7 sounds
<ou> - out,
soup, touch, soul, though, cough, thought
OGD
- out, suep, tuch, soel,
thoe, kawf, thawt
Span
- aut sup
tu'ch so'l tho'
cof thot
According
to McGuinnes (1997), most of the confusion in TO (the
traditional orthography) is caused by
26 alt. vowel spellings, 32 alt. consonant spellings, and 21 code overlaps.
Paul Hanna (19--) also thinks
that the sheer number of orthographic options makes the traditional writing
system confusing and overly complex. The obvious solution is to reduce
the number of spelling options and eliminate the code overlaps. Both
Truespel, Spanglish, and most reform orthographies do this.
While there are no spelling
rules without exceptions, there are probabilities and these can be learned
and used to increase the matches with traditional spelling
TIPS
FOR BETTER SPELLING
>
>A website devoted to finding
clearer paths through the
>morass of traditional English
spelling [TS].
>
>TS is about 50% regular
which suggests that you have a
>50 / 50 chance of spelling
a word in a way that will
>match dictionary spelling.
I am not sure that the
>odds are that good.
>
>One study of 70,000 words
indicated that there was an
>85% chance that one of
four orthographic options would
>match the dictionary.
>
>------
>
>Does anyone have an explanation
for why [believe] and
>[receive] are spelled the
way they are. According to
>the Saxon alphabet, these
words would be pronounced
>beh-leev and reh-save.
The first is correct except
>for the superfluous e;
the second is off the mark.
>
>According to the pronunciation
guide they are
>pronounced r@si:v and b@li:v
>
>Contributions of additional
rules and tips are
>welcomed.
...
>> I added a cuppel of lines
tu the after <e> rule
>> belo. --
Pete B]
...
>> > > >> ><<
"When i-e, e-i both say 'e'
>> > > >> > How can
we guess which it should be?
>> > > >> > After
c an e apply --
>> > > >> > after
other letters, i.
>> >[ Unless, of corse,
it sownds like "ay"
>> [ as
it duz in "neighbor" and "weigh"
>> > > >> > Two more
exceptions we must note
>> > > >> > which
all scholars learn by rote.
>> > > >> > Leisure
is the first of these.
>> > > >> > For the
second we have seize." >>
>> >
...
A MOR COMPLETE RULE:
After 'c', 'e i'
says 'e'
elsewhere use for this
'i e'
'Weir, weird, leisure' break
the rule;
'seize' we likewise learn
at school.
('Eider, either, neither'
though
sound like 'eye' -- or rightly
so).
Some 'e'i' says 'a' we say
as in 'rein' and 'reign'
and 'weigh'.
--
DOUG EVERINGHAM,
>XU BYQTIFL PRINSeS STORE
>WUNS UPoN U TiM XU BYQTIFL
DoTR UV U GRAT MUJIsN WoNTID MOR PRLZ TQ PuT UMUNG
>HR TRejRZ .
>" LuK xRQ XU SeNTR UV XU
MQN WeN ITS BLQ ,"
>SeD HR MUXR IN aNSR TQ
HR KWeSCN, " YQ MiT FiND YOR HoRTS DEZiR
|