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Differences in British and American spelling

Thu 10 Nov 2016

English was introduced to what is modern day America in the 17th century by the British settlers. Since then the language has evolved and has been influenced by the many waves of immigration to the USA.

The spelling of British English words were cemented by Samuel Johnson in what is considered to be one of the most famous dictionaries in the world. It took Johnson, and six helpers, just over eight years to curate the 40,000 words that appeared in A Dictionary of the English Language, which was published in 1755.

Similarly in America ‘A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language’ was first printed in 1806 and popularised the American English spellings that were being used instead of the British English spellings of words, such as color instead of colour.

The author was Noah Webster who followed up the original dictionary in 1828 with his ‘An American Dictionary of the English Language’ which had over 70,000 words.

Here are some of the main differences in the spellings.

British English words ending in ‘our’ usually end in ‘or’ in American English:

British

US

colour

color

flavour

flavor

humour

humor

labour

labor

neighbour

neighbor

Verbs in British English that can be spelled with either ‘ize’ or ‘ise’ at the end are always spelled with ‘ize’ at the end in American English:

British

US

apologize or apologise

Apologize

organize or organise

Organize

recognize or recognise

Recognize

Verbs in British English that end in ‘yse’ are always spelled ‘yze’ in American English:

British

US

analyse

analyze

breathalyse

breathalyze

paralyse

paralyze

In British spelling ‘L’ is doubled in verbs ending in a vowel plus ‘L’. In American English, the ‘L’ is not doubled:

British

US

travel

travel

travelled

traveled

travelling

traveling

traveller

traveler

 

fuel

fuel

fuelled

fueled

fuelling

fueling

British English words that are spelled with the double vowels ae or oe tend to be just spelled with an e in American English: Although there are exceptions to the rule.  For example archaeology is spelt in the same way as British English but archeology would be acceptable in America but is incorrect in the UK. 

British

US

leukaemia

leukemia

manoeuvre

maneuver

oestrogen

estrogen

paediatric

pediatric

Some nouns that end with ‘ence’ in British English are spelled ‘ense in American English:’

British

US

defence

defense

licence

license

offence

offense

pretence

pretense

Some nouns that end with ‘ogue’ in British English end with either ‘og’ or ‘ogue in American English:

British

US

analogue

analog or analogue

catalogue

catalog or catalogue

dialogue

dialog or dialogue

There are also differences in the words that we use to find out the differences in words and their meanings read our article on the 'Is British English and American English the same language'.

http://greatbritishmag.co.uk/uk-culture/differences-in-british-and-american-spelling/

 


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