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How to Master English Spelling




The mastery of English spelling is a serious under-taking.  In the first place, we must actually memorize from one to three thousand words which are spelled in more or less irregular ways.  The best that can be done with these words is to classify them as much as possible and suggest methods of association which will aid the memory.  But after all, the drudgery of memorizing must be gone through with.

Again, those words called homonyms, which are pronounced alike but spelled differently, can be studied only in connection with their meaning, since the meaning and grammatical use in the sentence is our only key to their form.  So we have to go considerably beyond the mere mechanical association of letters.

Besides the two or three thousand common irregular words, the dictionary contains something over two hundred thousand other words. Of course no one of us can possibly have occasion to use all of those words; but at the same time, every one of us may sooner or later have occasion to use any one of them.  As we cannot tell before hand what ones we shall need, we should be prepared to write any or all of them upon occasion.  Of course we may refer to the dictionary; but this is not always, or indeed very often, possible.

It would obviously be of immense advantage to us if we could find a key to the spelling of these numerous but infrequently used words. The first duty of the instructor in spelling should be to provide such a key.  We would suppose off-hand that the three hundred thousand school-teachers in the United States would do this immediately and without suggestion--certainly that the writers of school-books would.

But many things have stood in the way.  It is only within a few years, comparatively speaking, that our language has become at all fixed in its spelling.  Noah Webster did a great deal to establish principles, and bring the spelling of as many words as possible to conform with these principles and with such analogies as seemed fairly well established. But other dictionary-makers have set up their ideas against his, and we have a conflict of authorities. 

If for any reason one finds himself spelling a word differently from the world about him, he begins to say, "Well, that is the spelling given in Worcester, or the Century, or the Standard, or the new Oxford."  So the word "authority" looms big on the horizon; and we think so much about authority, and about different authorities, that we forget to look for principles, as Mr. Webster would have us do.

Another reason for neglecting rules and principles is that the lists of exceptions are often so formidable that we get discouraged and exclaim, "If nine tenths of the words I use every day are exceptions to the rules, what is the use of the rules anyway!"  Well, the words which constitute that other tenth will aggregate in actual numbers far more than the common words which form the chief part of everyday speech, and as they are selected at random from a vastly larger number, the only possible way to master them is by acquiring principles, consciously or unconsciously, which will serve as a key to them.

Some people have the faculty of unconsciously formulating principles from their everyday observations, but it is a slow process, and many never acquire it unless it is taught them.

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