Whats the difference between orthography and spelling? @Lefteris Gkinis Orthography is an English word that had origin from a Greek word; translating a word in Greek, and reporting what that means in Greek is essentially wrong because the topic of this site is English If you report from which Greek word the English word has been originated, that is fine, but saying "the Greek word means this
Newest orthography Questions - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Orthography of an -s plural with contraction of "is" [closed] In Wilson Vance and John Philip Sousa's operetta Katherine (1879), we have these two lines: Telling my brave [deeds is] my scorn The day of knightly [deeds is] not gone In both cases, [deeds is]
orthography - What is this famous example of the absurdity of English . . . This fallacy arises from the incorrect application of the rules linking orthography to phonology 1, resulting in an argument that 'ghoti' should be pronounced similarly to 'fish': gh, pronounced [f] as in enough [ɪˈnʌf] or tough [tʌf]; o, pronounced [ɪ] as in women [ˈwɪmɪn]; and
orthography - What is the difference between a dieresis and an umlaut . . . In German it causes back vowels a , o and u to shift forward in the mouth to ɛ , ø and y , respectively In modern German orthography, the affected graphemes a , o and u are written as ä , ö and ü , i e they are written with the diacritical mark "umlaut", which looks identical to the diaeresis mark
orthography - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I'd say mostly a matter of style, although if I were to speculate based on these results I'd say that byproduct without the hyphen is more likely to occur in American orthography Also, the labeling of each dictionary as AmE and BrE as I've done may be misleading, as some dictionaries claim to be representative of both