Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Pedants' corner

Frequently misspelt words

27 replies

hallelujahheisrisen · 11/04/2012 15:55

I need to improve my spelling. I need a list of words that are "difficult" but useful. I struggle with ence/ance and double letters.

I have collected a list of spellings that I know I have trouble with but need more. So far I am learning:

necessary/success
discrete/discreet (thanks pedants)
embarrass/embarrassment
sentence
separate
definite (pedants again)
religious

Until someone pointed out definite and discrete/discreet I did not even know I was getting them wrong, Blush so there are bound to be a lot more that I have no idea I am getting wrong.

Help please!

OP posts:
Rinkan · 11/04/2012 18:02

Accommodation.

OlaRapaceFru · 11/04/2012 19:17

Presumably you know that the words discrete and discreet have two completely different meanings?

Stationery (office supplies like paper, pens etc) and stationary (standing still/not moving)

OlaRapaceFru · 11/04/2012 19:46

Liaise (correct)
Liase (incorrect)

cherrypieplum · 11/04/2012 19:51

Independant instead of -dent.

I work with someone who says 'mute' instead of 'moot', as in 'mute point'. Grr!!

sayanything · 11/04/2012 19:52

Loose (opposite of tight) and lose (misplace)

hallelujahheisrisen · 12/04/2012 00:14

Ola... only because someone in pedants corner pointed it out! Blush (Crete as in separate from the mainland)

Stationery has an e for envelope. I have to think about it but can work it out.

Loose and lose drive me bonkers. They are another pair that I have to stop writing and work out... I really wish it would come automatically. (chants "loose goose")

Independant? oh hell! I use that a lot and have probably been spelling it wong all over the place.

Government and parliament were taught at school.

OP posts:
LeBOF · 12/04/2012 00:21

I remember 'separate' by thinking 'someone will smell A RAT if I get it wrong': it helps me avoid putting an 'e' in instead of an 'a'.

I remember 'discrete', meaning separate (ha!) and distinct, by thinking of it as a short, pinched, single 'e' in the middle. I remember 'discreet' by thinking of the long 'ee' as a stage whisper: 'Shhh, be discreeeeet!'

qo · 12/04/2012 00:31

I consider myself to be a good speller, but for some inane reason I always want to put an extra T in attachment (attatchment)

Clary · 12/04/2012 00:36

effect and affect (one is usually the noun, the other is almost always a verb)

questionnaire

would have / would've not would of (that's not really spelling tho)

yy stationary/ery, saw that wrong on a printed notice the other day

Practice (noun) and practise (verb) - think about advice and advise, they are said differently but the c/s rule follows.

I am good at spelling but for some reason always get brocolli wrong ... broccoli???

joanofarchitrave · 12/04/2012 00:46

Breath/breathe, breaths/breathes - another noun/verb mixup that is quite frequent.
Too/to - the extra o makes it too much, the single o gets you to the end quicker
Brought/bought - either you bring it or buy it, they are not the same thing.

hallelujahheisrisen · 12/04/2012 00:48
OP posts:
Clary · 12/04/2012 00:53

In which case it's broccoli OP, not brocolli! I only realise I have gone wrong (on my shopping list as a rule) when I get to the l and think, "oh no, double l looks wrong, but it's double something, oh no, doublle c...."

LeBOF · 12/04/2012 00:57

Double C, because it looKs like a Cauliflower- a double hard 'c' sound.

LeBOF · 12/04/2012 00:58

Ooh, I cocked up the bolding there. But you know what I mean.

qo · 12/04/2012 01:08

Formerly and formally Grin Grin

forshitsandgiggles · 12/04/2012 01:48

It should be indepenDENT not independant. So many people get that one wrong!

HangingGarden · 12/04/2012 14:21

Not so much spellings as knowing which is the right one to use:
Were/where
There/their/they're
Your/you're
Rite/right

Past/passed

BrigitBigKnickers · 12/04/2012 15:02

Root words to help me remember some tricky ones:

separate (pare)

definite (finite)

Also some silly rhymes: "It is necessary for Mary (ary) to have
one collar (c) and two socks (ss)"

Itsjustafleshwound · 12/04/2012 15:06

its and it's ... the apostrophe shows that the word is 'missing' a letter ...

a lot and a bit - not alot

BusinessTrills · 12/04/2012 15:10

Alot

Nanny0gg · 12/04/2012 21:42

Phased (as in phased-out)
And fazed (as in discomposure)

crabb · 15/04/2012 09:29

The Oatmeal has a helpful poster.

crabb · 15/04/2012 09:33

Oops, that link didn't work. Try again. The Oatmeal

UnnamedFemaleProtagonist · 15/04/2012 09:36

I prefer 'spelled' to 'spelt' and 'misspelled' to 'missspelt' but I think both are considered acceptable.

jkklpu · 15/04/2012 09:42

practice/licence = nouns
my GP practice, my driving licence
practise/license = verbs
Practise the piano every day; pubs are licensed premises

Swipe left for the next trending thread