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The grammar geeks among you will know that I am a confused blogger! I am British although I lived in Australia and New Zealand for 11 years, plus I write for a mainly American audience.
So I find my spelling is probably a mix of the cultures, which means I get some grumpy emails sometimes about my spelling! Today's guest post is from Oliver Randall, who looks at some of the differences between British and American English spellings.
If your job involves writing in almost any capacity, you’ve probably fallen foul of a UK/US spelling mix-up at some point.
Maybe you write for an international audience, only to have people showing up in the comments, decrying the ‘Americanisation’ of English.
Maybe you handed in a draft to a publisher that gave the overwhelming impression you can’t spell, simply because Microsoft Word reverted to its default spell-check setting.
Or possibly you just want to make sure you’re absolutely on top of your writing game.
Well, you’ve come to the right place. Below we’ve compiled a list of common English/American spelling mistakes according to type, so you need never again lay anchor in the ‘harbor’ when you mean to do so in the ‘harbour’, or ‘apologize’ when you should ‘apologise’. Of course, you may still make mistakes, but at least now you’ll do so consistently.
‘ou’ or ‘o’?
As in: colour/color
humour/humor
This is probably the most common cause of English/American confusion: does a word require an ‘ou’, or will a simple ‘o’ suffice? Simply: Brits use ‘ou’ while the Yanks simplify it to ‘o’. And before any Oxford-type starts guffawing at Americans for having to do things simply, bear in mind that the original ‘o’ spelling is correct in Latin.
The switched ‘re’
As in: theatre/theater
Centre/center
Another common mistake is the ‘re’ at the end of certain English words. While it makes more sense to spell ‘centre’ how it sounds (‘center’), history has favoured the ‘re’ spelling, especially in ‘theatre’. In fact, ‘theatre’ is a viable spelling even if writing for an American audience, just to complicate things further.
‘ise’ or ‘ize’?
As in: realise/realize
Organise/organize
While ‘ise’ is only used in English, the Oxford English Dictionary informs us that ‘ize’ can be used in either country. Which begs the question, why use ‘ise’ at all? Well, some Brits prefer ‘ise’, it’s a simple as that. If you’re writing for a UK audience you might as well cover yourself and drop ‘ize’, just in case.
‘yse’ or ‘yze’?
As in: analyse/analyze
Paralyse/paralyze
Although it sounds like the ‘ise’/’ize’ dilemma, ‘yse’/’yze’ differentiates itself by being geographically specific. Refuse a ‘breathalyzer’ from an English bobby and you’ll be laughed out the station. In this one you can see where both sides are coming from: analysis does end in ‘s’, but its plural is pronounced with a ‘z’. Whoever you think is right, the use of these two variations is happily clear-cut.
The extra ‘L’
As in: traveller/traveler
Like many dropped or added consonants, this variation seems primarily designed to confuse you. Suffice to say, there is no reason for that extra ‘l’ to be there, except it just sort of looks right. Americans, ever to the point, do away with it entirely.
The missing vowel
As in: oestrogen/estrogen
Paedophile/pedophile
There’s no hard and fast rule here. Often, Americans simply dispose of a useless vowel, especially one situated right beside an ‘e’. But then you get a word like ‘archaeology’, which can be spelt the same both sides of the Atlantic. Why that ‘a’ hasn’t been culled is anyone’s guess, but follow your instincts and spell it ‘archeology’ and you’ll come across as a buffoon, however unfair that may seem.
‘Ence’ or ‘Ense’?
As in: offence/offense
Licence/license
Is the best form of attack ‘defence’ or ‘defense’? The ‘ence/ense’ ending is another common mistake, but luckily no weird rules apply. Simply put ‘ence’ in England and ‘ense’ in America. Easy.
The ‘ogue’ debate
As in: analogue/analog
Dialogue/dialog
Now this is a contentious one. Despite a simple ‘log’ being acceptable in the States, ‘logue’ is not only also accepted, but far more widely used. Remember the ‘ise/ize’ debate from above, where one version was used everywhere, but the other only in Britain? This is the American version. As before, cover yourself by putting ‘log’ when dealing with an American audience. Better that than making a bad impression on your Stateside editor.
Grammar geeks may also enjoy this interview with the author of ‘The Joy of English'
Do you have any particular spelling or grammar niggles? Please do leave a comment below and join the conversation.
About the Author
Oliver Randall is a content strategist and blogger for UK printing service Print Express. Outside of the workplace he enjoys scriptwriting and coffee, which usually results in very little sleep.
Image: BigstockPhoto.com Alphabet
Raphael D. Swift says
I find the list of acceptable alternate American English spellings has decreased over my lifetime. When I was in grade school the color grey was perfectly acceptable and the colour grey was frowned for being pretentious but not marked for spelling. Now it seems the only option is the color gray.
I have a hard time with this as the email program I’ve used for >20 years has a far more comprehensive UK English dictionary than US so I’m heavily trained to alternate spellings. Some of this is associative as well, if I’ve writing about timber framing it’s a mortice but in furniture it’s a mortise.
Karen van Wyk says
I almost drove myself crazy with this when I tried to edit my first novel for the American market. Now I just write my narrative in South African English and apologise for it on my website. Dialogue is another issue though. The novel I’m editing at the moment is set in the UK and features both South African and British characters and, after living in the UK for years, I’ve just discovered I can’t speak British English at all.
Masha Bell says
I barely notice the US/UK spelling differences because they occur mainly in word endings. Sadly, most US changes have merely made American spelling different rather than easier to learn. The -or endings of ‘labor’ and ‘habor’ still have to be learned as exceptions from the main -er pattern of ‘father, mother, number…’
‘Center, fiber, saber, theater and kilometer’ are more sensible than the British ‘centre, fibre, sabre, theatre’ and ‘kilometre’, as is ‘marveled’. The most sensible spelling for ‘travelled/traveled’ would be ‘travled’ or ‘travveled’, to show that the ‘a’ is short. The most worthwhile US change has been to conflate the British ‘to practise / a practice’ differentiation which still causes endless mistakes over here.
I am appalled by the numerous irregularities which make learning to read and write in all English-speaking countries much harder than need be
http://englishspellingproblems.blogspot.com/2009/12/rules-and-exceptions-of-english.html
and necessitate memorisation of unpredictable spelling quirks for 3,700 common words
http://englishspellingproblems.blogspot.com/2010/11/english-spelling-rules.html .
Joanna Penn says
Another funny one in terms of vocabulary is trousers and pants – I always find the latter difficult since pants are underwear in the UK 🙂
Cristina says
Just wanted to add my voice to this discussion. I’m born English but writing in the States for an American audience about events in England. I’ve used American English mostly but only English English for dialogue. As I still at the first draft stage I may find that it changes once an editor sees it.
As well as the usual different spellings already mentioned I have been corrected about the past tense of to fit. “I fitted all the books onto the shelf.” In the US it seems it’s fit, for both present and past. Also, learnt, as in “I learnt the correct spellings before I began to write,” has been corrected to learned.
Puntuation also seems to have its quirks. The semi colon is frowned on in the US and used far less than in the UK, I think.
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mijnheer says
“Which begs the question, why use ‘ise’ at all?”
No, it does not “beg the question”.
http://afterdeadline.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/09/25/begging-the-question-again/
Emma Dee says
I’m American and I live in the US and I don’t know anyone who spells it “dialog” or “analog”. That just looks stupid. I can’t even remember ever reading anything that didn’t put the “ue” in.
Rob says
Dialog , I’ve discovered seems to be “Microsoft” talk. I work in IT in Canada and Microsoft makes it more difficult to install any version of english which is not American.
ed says
“bear in mind the original ‘o’ spelling is correct in Latin “, so what, you’re saying American writers and authours looked at Latin before changing the spelling on a national scale? Oh what? You’re not? Because you can’t equate two irrelevant events to each other? Latin is a fucking dead language too. What a stupid point to make, trying to justify the American fashion of changing shit for the sake of changing shit to ‘it’s like Latin’ how fucking simple minded. It has NOTHING to do with Latin, saying it’s like Latin DOESN’T make it relevant. It’s colour.
Keith C Towers says
I have been putting my ebook together over the past 3 months . I have used the UK English dictionary and have not had issues with other than a few contradictory spellings . Being educated in the UK has made me somewhat doubting of the Americanised spelling of English words . I would feel quite upset to think that the American buying public would reject it based on such tenuous cultural differences that are still nonetheless two-way-recognisable both sides of the pond .
Joanna Penn says
The USA has 280 million people. The UK has 70 million. I tend to write to please the bigger market 🙂
Phil says
I’m an American reader. I couldn’t care less about British spelling. The meaning is completely clear and it tells me right away that the author is from elsewhere in the Anglosphere.