Commonly misspelled words
Encyclopedia
The term "commonly misspelled words" (or rarely, "common misspelled words") refers to the practice of often misspelling some common words, in general writing.
A selected list of common words is presented below, under: Documented list of common misspellings.

Although the word "common" is subjective depending on the situation, the focus is on general writing, rather than in a specific field. Official spellings also vary by country or region, with some rejecting the American or British variants
American and British English spelling differences
One of the ways in which American English and British English differ is in spelling.-Historical origins:In the early 18th century, English spelling was not standardized. Differences became noticeable after the publishing of influential dictionaries...

 as incorrect for the region.

Within a particular field of study, such as computer graphics
Computer graphics
Computer graphics are graphics created using computers and, more generally, the representation and manipulation of image data by a computer with help from specialized software and hardware....

, other words might be more common for misspelling, such as "pixel" misspelled as "pixle" (or variants "cesium" and "caesium"). Sometimes words are purposely misspelled, as a form in slang, abbreviation
Abbreviation
An abbreviation is a shortened form of a word or phrase. Usually, but not always, it consists of a letter or group of letters taken from the word or phrase...

s, or in song lyrics
Lyrics
Lyrics are a set of words that make up a song. The writer of lyrics is a lyricist or lyrist. The meaning of lyrics can either be explicit or implicit. Some lyrics are abstract, almost unintelligible, and, in such cases, their explication emphasizes form, articulation, meter, and symmetry of...

, etc.

In general writing, some words are frequently misspelled, such as the incorrect spelling "concensus" for "consensus"

found in numerous webpages on the Internet. Other common misspellings include "equiptment" (for "equipment"),
"independant" (for "independent"),
"readible" (for readable),
or "usible" (for usable
USable
USable is a special idea contest to transfer US American ideas into practice in Germany. USable is initiated by the German Körber-Stiftung .It is doted with 150,000 Euro and awarded every two years. All persons which know Germany and the USA from their own experience can take part in the contest...

/useable
).

Unlimited misspellings

Because many words can be extended with prefixes (such as "un-" or "anti-" or "re-") or suffixes (such as "-ly" or "-ing" or "-ness"), a comprehensive list of words prone to misspelling would contain thousands of variations from combining prefixes or suffixes (or both) added to the root words. To limit the scope to common words, the top 350 words are considered (according to various sources).

Documented list of common misspellings

The following list, of about 350 words, is based on documented lists of the top 100, 200, or 400 most commonly misspelled words, rather than listing every conceivable misspelled word. Each word is followed by examples of misspellings:

A–B

  • absence – absense, absance
  • acceptable – acceptible
  • accidentally/accidently – accidentaly
  • accommodate – accomodate, acommodate
  • achieve – acheive
  • acknowledge – acknowlege, aknowledge
  • acquaintance – acquaintence, aquaintance
  • acquire – aquire, adquire
  • acquit – aquit
  • acreage – acrage, acerage
  • address – adress
  • adultery – adultary
  • advisable – adviseable, advizable
  • affect – effect
  • aggression – agression, aggresion
  • alcohol – alchohol
  • allege – alege, allage
  • allegiance – allegaince, allegience, alegiance
  • almost – allmost
  • a lot – alot (must be two words)
  • amateur – amatuer, amature
  • amend – ammend
  • annually – anually, annualy
  • apparent – apparant, aparent
  • arctic – artic
  • argument – arguement
  • atheist – athiest
  • average – avrage, averege
  • awful – awfull, aweful
  • balance – ballance, balence
  • basically – basicly
  • because – becuase
  • becoming – becomeing
  • beginning – begining
  • believe – beleive
  • bellwether – bellweather
  • buoy/buoyant – bouy/bouyant
  • burglar – burgler
  • business – bisness, bussiness,
    bizness, buisness

  • C–D

    • calendar – calender
    • camouflage – camoflage, camoflague
    • capitol – capital(both words exist, but are distinct)
    • career – carrer
    • careful – carefull
    • Caribbean – Carribean
    • category – catagory
    • caught – cauhgt, caugt
    • ceiling – cieling
    • cemetery – cemetary, cematery
    • certain – certin
    • changeable – changable
    • chief – cheif
    • citizen – citezen
    • colleague – collaegue, collegue
    • collectible – collectable
    • column – colum
    • comfortable - confortable
    • coming – comming
    • committed – commited, comitted
    • competition – compitition
    • concede – conceed
    • conceive - concieve
    • congratulate – congradulate
    • conscientious – consciencious
    • conscious – concious, consious
  • consensus – concensus
  • controversy – contraversy
  • convenience – conveniance
  • coolly – cooly
  • criticize – critecize, critisize
  • daiquiri – dacquiri, daquiri
  • deceive – decieve
  • decide – dicide
  • definite – definate, definit
  • definitely – definitly, definately, defiantly
  • desperate – desparate
  • develop – develope
  • difference – diffrence
  • dilemma – dilema
  • disappear – disapear, dissapear
  • disappoint – disapoint
  • disastrous – disasterous
  • drunkenness – drunkeness
  • dumbbell – dumbell
  • during – durring

  • E–H

    • easily – easely
    • eighth – eigth
    • either – iehter, ether
    • embarrass – embarass
    • entrepreneur – enterpreneur
    • environment – enviroment
    • equipped – equiped
    • equipment – equiptment (wrong in numerous webpages)
    • exaggerate – exagerate
    • exceed – excede
    • excellent – exellent, excelent
    • except – exsept
    • exercise – exercize, exersize
    • exhausted - exausted
    • exhilarate – exilerate
    • existence – existance
    • expect - exspect
    • experience – experiance
    • experiment – experament
    • explanation – explaination
    • extreme – extreem
    • familiar – familier
    • fascinating – facinating, fasinating
    • fiery – firey
    • finally – finaly
  • fluorescent – flourescent
  • fluoride – flouride
  • foreign – foriegn
  • forty – fourty
  • forward – foreward
  • friend – freind
  • fulfil – fullfil (American: fulfill)
  • fundamental – fundemental
  • gauge – guage
  • generally – generaly, genrally
  • government – goverment
  • grammar – grammer
  • grateful – gratefull, greatful
  • guarantee – garantee, garentee, garanty
  • guidance – guidence
  • happiness – happyness
  • harass – harrass
  • height – heighth, heigth
  • heroes – heros
  • hierarchy – heirarchy
  • hors d'oeuvres – hors derves, ordeurves
  • humorous – humerous
  • hygiene – hygene, hygine, higeine, hygeine
  • hypocrisy/hypocrite – hipocrit

  • I–K

    • identity – idenity, identidy
    • ignorance – ignorence
    • imaginary – imaginery
    • imitate – immitate
    • imitation – immitation, imitashun
    • immediately – imediately
    • incidentally – incidently
    • independent – independant
    • indispensable – indispensible
    • inoculate – innoculate
    • intelligence – inteligence, intelligance
    • interesting – intresting
  • interfere
  • interpretation
  • interruption – interuption
  • irrelevant – irrelevent
  • irritable – irritible
  • island – iland
  • jealous – jellous
  • jewelry (UK: jewellery) – jewelery
  • judgment – judgement (issue in the U.S.)
  • kernel – kernal, distinct from homophone colonel
  • kindergarten - kindergarden
  • knowledge – knowlege

  • L–O

    • leisure – liesure
    • liaison – liason
    • library – libary, liberry
    • license – lisence (US always license, UK noun licence)
    • lightning – lightening
    • loneliness – lonelyness
    • lose – loose
    • losing – loosing, loseing
    • lying – lieing
    • maintenance – maintenence, maintnance
    • maneuver – manuever, manuver (UK: manoeuvre)
    • marriage – marrige
    • masturbation—masterbation
    • mathematics – mathmatics
    • medicine – medcine
    • medieval – medeval, medevil, mideval
    • memento – momento
    • millennium – millenium, milennium
    • miniature – miniture
    • minuscule – miniscule
    • minute – minite
  • mischievous – mischevous, mischevious
  • misspell – mispell, misspel
  • mysterious – misterius, misterious
  • naturally – naturaly
  • necessary – neccessary, necessery
  • niece – neice
  • neighbor – nieghbor
  • neither – niether
  • noticeable – noticable
  • occasion – occassion
  • occasionally – occasionaly, occassionally
  • occurrence – occurrance, occurence
  • occurred – occured
  • official – oficial
  • often – offen
  • omission – ommision, omision
  • operate – oprate
  • opportunity – oppurtunity
  • optimism – optimisim
  • original – orignal
  • ought
  • outrageous – outragous

  • P–Q

    • paid – payed
    • parallel – parrallel, parellel
    • parliament – parliment
    • particularly – particurly
    • pastime – passtime, pasttime
    • peculiar – peculier
    • perceive – percieve
    • perform – preform
    • permanent – pernament
    • perseverance – perseverence
    • personally – personaly
    • personnel – personell, personel
    • persuade – persaude
    • pervious - (1) pervious, (2) previous; check individually
    • picture – pichure, pitcher
    • piece – peice
    • planning – planing
    • plagiarize – plagerize
    • playwright – playright, playwrite
    • pleasant – plesant
    • political – pollitical
    • possession – posession, possesion
    • potatoes – potatos
    • practical – practicle
  • precede – preceed
  • prejudice – predjudice
  • presence – presance
  • primitive – primative
  • principle – principal
  • privilege – privelege, priviledge
  • probably – probly
  • professional – proffesional
  • professor – professer
  • promise – promiss
  • pronunciation – pronounciation
  • proof – prufe
  • prophecy (as noun) – prophesy (valid as verb)
  • psychology – psycology
  • publicly – publically
  • quantity – quanity
  • quarantine – quarentine
  • queue – que (from Bar-B-Que)
  • questionnaire – questionaire, questionnair
  • quite – distinct from quiet

  • R–S

    • readable – readible
    • realize – relize, reelize
    • really – realy
    • receive – recieve
    • receipt – reciept
    • recognize – reconize, reckonize
    • recommend – recomend, reccommend
    • referred – refered
    • reference – referance, refrence
    • relevant – relevent, revelant
    • religious – religous, religius
    • repetition – repitition
    • restaurant – restarant, restaraunt
    • rhyme – rime, ryme
    • rhythm – rythm, rythem
    • ridiculous – rediculous, ridicolous
    • sacrifice – sacrefice
    • safety – saftey, safty
    • scissors – sissors
  • secretary – secratary, secretery
  • seize – sieze
  • separate – seperate
  • sergeant – sargent
  • shining – shineing
  • similar – similer, simmilar, simular
  • sincerely – sinceerly
  • skilful – skilfull (American: skillful)
  • soldier – solider
  • speech – speach, speeche (archaic)
  • stopping – stoping
  • strength – strenght
  • succeed – succede
  • successful – succesful, successfull, sucessful
  • supersede - supercede
  • surely – surelly
  • surprise – suprise, surprize

  • T–Z

    • their – they're
    • tomatoes – tomatos
    • tomorrow – tommorrow
    • twelfth – twelth
    • tyranny – tyrany
    • underrate – underate
    • until – untill
    • upholstery – upholstry
    • usable/useable – usible
  • using – useing
  • usually – usualy
  • vacuum – vaccuum, vacume
  • vegetarian – vegatarian
  • vehicle – vehical
  • vicious – visious
  • weather – wether
  • weird – wierd
  • welfare – wellfare, welfair
  • whether – wether
  • wilful – wilfull (American: willful)
  • withhold – withold
  • writing – writting, writeing


  • Mispronunciation

    Mispronunciation
    Mispronunciation
    Mispronunciation is defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as "incorrect or inaccurate pronunciation". The matter of what is or is not mispronunciation is a contentious one, and indeed there is some disagreement about the extent to which the term is even meaningful...

     is known to be one of the most common causes of misspelling.
    Hence, phonetic misspelling is common, once a word is mispronounced; for example, the word "realize" is misspelled as "relize".

    Typing errors

    Some spelling errors are introduced because people's typing is not perfect, such as
    • letters are doubled, or more frequently double letters tripled, such as "betwween" and "betweeen"
    • letters are singled, such as "betwen"
    • keys are transposed, so "because" becomes "becuase". (see Teh
      Teh
      Teh is an Internet slang neologism most frequently used as an English article, based on a common typographical error of "the". Teh has subsequently developed grammatical usages distinct from the...

      )

    Some of the errors listed may be due to mistyping rather than ignorance, for example "solider" for "soldier".

    These misspellings rarely happen in handwritten text.

    Homophones

    Two differently spelt words with different meanings may be homophone
    Homophone
    A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but differs in meaning. The words may be spelled the same, such as rose and rose , or differently, such as carat, caret, and carrot, or to, two, and too. Homophones that are spelled the same are also both homographs and homonyms...

    s, with the same pronunciation; e.g., right, rite, wright, and write; read (most tense
    Grammatical tense
    A tense is a grammatical category that locates a situation in time, to indicate when the situation takes place.Bernard Comrie, Aspect, 1976:6:...

    s of verb) and reed; read (past
    Past tense
    The past tense is a grammatical tense that places an action or situation in the past of the current moment , or prior to some specified time that may be in the speaker's past, present, or future...

    , past participle) and red. This list includes only a few homophones although incorrect use of homophones is a very common error; the following words from the list are all good English words, though often incorrectly used in place of their homophones: advice, affect, artic (colloquial UK usage for "articulated lorry"), aweful, breath, calender, capital, dose, its, lightening, loose, loosing, planing, principal, rime, solider, stoping, they're, wether and you're. Spelling checkers do not detect incorrect use of homophones.

    Personal names

    Personal names and surname
    Surname
    A surname is a name added to a given name and is part of a personal name. In many cases, a surname is a family name. Many dictionaries define "surname" as a synonym of "family name"...

    s may be pronounced like a standard English word, but with different spelling: "balance" and "John Ballance"; "war" and "Evelyn Waugh"; "marshal" and "George Marshall". Personal names do of course generally start with a capital letter.

    Foreign writers

    A misspelling in English might be made by someone used to a different spelling in another language; for example, "address" is translated "adresse" in French and German. Many Spanish words are similar or identical to English words, but with an "n" inserted, or replacing an "m", leading to errors: "inmigrant" from "inmigrante", "cementery" from "cementerio", "confortable". The English word 'loose' reasonably looks like it should be pronounced as 'lose' to Germans, as in German the lone 's' often has the sound of an English 'z', and a lone 'o' in English very seldom has the 'oo' sound.

    Strange misspellings

    Sometimes words are misspelled so strangely that one would never guess. These misspellings are often one-off typographical errors, for example: "sucseessor" for "successor".

    Concatenation

    While "albeit" is a correct concatenation
    Concatenation
    In computer programming, string concatenation is the operation of joining two character strings end-to-end. For example, the strings "snow" and "ball" may be concatenated to give "snowball"...

     of "all be it", "upto" is not yet a recognized concatenation of "up to". "Alright" is often accepted for "all right".

    Apostrophes

    There can be confusion over a plural possessive form. If the singular is "book's title" and the plural "books' titles", the latter can appear as "book's", or even "books's". The plural can be written with an erroneous apostrophe ("grocer's apostrophe" in Britain): "apple's and pear's". Elision
    Elision
    Elision is the omission of one or more sounds in a word or phrase, producing a result that is easier for the speaker to pronounce...

    can lead to misspelling: "doesn't", where the apostrophe represents the elided "o", can be misspelled "does'nt".

    External links

    • "100 Most Often Misspelled Words in English", LoveToKnow, Corp., December 2008, webpage: YDict-100.
    The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
     
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