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SoundSpel
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see
SoundSpel
'''SoundSpel''' is one of the many
English language spelling reform proposals. Its origins date back to
1910.
SoundSpel has been endorsed by the
American Literacy Council because English speakers can easily read it.
A sample of SoundSpel text
1. The Star (HG Wells)
It was on the ferst dae of the nue yeer the anounsment was maed, allmoest siemultaeniusly frum three obzervatorys, that the moeshun of the planet Neptune, the outermoest of all planets that wheel about the Sun, had becum verry erratic. A retardaeshun in its velosity had bin suspected in Desember. Then a faent, remoet spek of liet was discuverd in the reejon of the perterbd planet. At ferst this did not cauz eny verry graet exsietment. Sieentific peepl, however, found the intelijens remarkabl enuf, eeven befor it becaem noen that the nue body was rapidly groeing larjer and brieter, and that its moeshun was qiet different frum the orderly progres of the planets.
Background
The history of SoundSpel goes back to
1910, what is now known as "Classic New Spelling". Philologist
Alexander John Ellis played a major role in developing the system.
Walter Ripman and
William Archer wrote the first dictionary of the system, "New Spelling" (NuSpelling), which was republished in
1941 by the
Simplified Spelling Society.
In
1969 Godfrey Dewey improved upon Ripman's and Archer's work, producing "World English Spelling". Dewey and
Edward Rondthaler, a prominent typesetter, CEO of
International Typeface Corporation, corresponded from
1971.
In
1986 the book "Dictionary of Simplified American Spelling" written
by Rondthaler and
Edward Lias was published by the
American Language Academy. Its full title was "Dictionary of American spelling: A simplified alternative spelling for the English language : written as it sounds, pronounced as it's written". This called for improvements to spelling, with clearer rules and better
grapheme/
phoneme correspondence. It was slightly less strict than Classic New Spelling, allowing "the" rather than "dhe", for example.
The system was further reformed from
1987 on and became SoundSpel (TM).
Advantages
*SoundSpel does not introduce any new letters or symbols, unlike the radical proposals of the
Shavian alphabet Shavian and
Deseret alphabet Deseret alphabets
*SoundSpel relies upon familiar
Digraph (orthography) digraphs
*SoundSpel does not introduce
diacriticals (accents), which are typically not favoured by North Americans
*SoundSpel does not dramatically change the appearance of existing words
*SoundSpel increases regularity of the spelling rules
*SoundSpel improves consistency in the way the vowels are sounded
Disadvantages
*The phonetics is primarily based upon "General American" and differs slightly from the British "Received Pronunciation." There may be other small differences from Australian, Indian, South African, Canadian and other regional accents.
*Approximately half of the words in common use are respelled.
*It is easy to read, but significant effort is required to learn to write it directly. Computer software is currently available to perform the respelling.
*It is one of many proposals. There is no common agreement upon which proposal should be adopted.
Adoption
Spelling reform is currently stalled between many competing proposals, including the no change option.
See also
*
Spelling reform
*
English spelling
*
Basic English
*
Simplified English
*
Cut Spelling
External links
-
SoundSpel
-
The American Literary Council
Category: English spelling reform
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