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The Basic Code
 ISecrets of Traditional English Spelling
The morpho-phonemic systejm used to write the English language has some  phonemic regularity and quite a bit of morphemic [or grammatical] regularity 
  To embed a font, go to www.MS.com/typography
The Basic Code
The code overlaps

consonants 1  2  3
Spelling rulesspelling rules
The other code sites  truespel
104 symbols
References

Those who have taken the time to learn the basic code behind English spelling can spell better than those who are unaware of these statsitcal regularities.  Many adults have said they were never taught that the silent e is often used as a marker to indicate that the preceding vowel is long.  There are quite a few such regularities in English spelling that many people may be unaware of. 

The basic code:  Each phoneme represented by only one letter or digraph.  See truespel-3.html 

While there are no spelling rules without exceptions, there are probabilities and these can be learned and used to increase the matches with traditional spelling.  This is the basic code.

According to McGuinnes (1997), most of the confusion in TO (the traditional orthography)  is caused by 26 alternate vowel spellings, 32 alternate consonant spellings, and 21 code overlaps.

Paul Hanna thinks that the sheer number of orthographic options makes the traditional writing system confusing and overly complex.  The obvious solution is to reduce the number of spelling options and eliminate the code overlaps.  Truespel, Spanglish, and most other reform orthographies do this. RITE states the goal in their name, Reduced Irregularity in Traditional English.

New codes can eliminate the inconsistencies in English spelling and bring spelling in line with pronunciation. 

However, 100% phonemic transcriptions respell over 60% of the words in the dictionary which detracts from their likelihood of being widely accepted as a substitute for the traditional writing system. . 

Since it is based on the alphabet used for Old English, it is part of the code of English spelling.  It could be the basis of a new consistent code for English.  However, it is used here as a pronunciation guide and a meta language - a way of talking about sounds.

This page is not about spelling reform, it is about how to live with the inconsistency. 

25 consonants in English speech - 90+ spellings in written English

24 Consonant Phonemes [the phoneme ng is missing from both the traditional system and Truespel]
13 with one spelling by position
b d h l p t v ng qu sh th tth wh
12 with one dominant spelling pattern
f g j k m n r s w x z ch 
The z phoneme is generally spelled with an s.  z is dominant only in the initial position

26 spelling alternatives for 12 consonants plus 73 consonant clusters - 99 


Sounds and their spellings in the traditional code
Single Consonant Spelling Alternatives  (idea from McGuinness, p. 103)
Different ways the consonant sound is spelled at the beginning and end of words
See ghost letters - silent and redundant letters and polyvalence
The silent magic e endings usually indicate a long vowel: guide/behave  exceptions have, give, ...
sound
key word
word beginning
word ending
variants

ch



h [silent in some words]

k-c 
kh
l   [can be semi-vowel]
m [can be semi-vowel]
[can be semi-vowel]
ng

[can be semi-vowel]
s
sh


w hw [semi-vowel]
x  [ks, gs, sh/ch/s]
[semi-vowel]
z
zh
boot, bib, tribe
church, ciao, 
dog, did, mode
fun, fife, enough 
got, gig 
hot, who, herb, casbah
job, judge, gem
kick, school, cold, arctic 
loch
log, till, little
man, comb, column 
not, knot, gnome
sing
pig, pip, pipe 
red, write, rare 
sat, fence [confess]
show, hush, 
tot, tote, debt
van, valve 
win, when, 
tax, xerox,  Xena
yell, yacht
zip, size, fizz
measure garage

ch, c

ph
g  gu  gh
h  wh (hw) silent
g
c  k  ch
--


n  kn  gn
--
p
r  wr ur
c  sc
sh, ch


w  wh 
-- [foreign names]
y
z, x
--
b, be
ch
de
ff  ph  gh  fe
gue  gg 
ah - silent  terminal
ge  dge 
ck  ic ke
ch
l   ll  el  le
mb  mn
n  gn foreign ne
ng
p pe
r er re
ce  se  ss  s 
sh  [c in Saxon]
bt ght te
ve
-- [ ow is a vowel]
x [ks, gs, kh]
-no consonant endings
s se  ze  zz  z 
s, z, ge
5

7
8
6
3
12
17

7
8
14
3
5
11
17
20
14
8
10
?5 snds
8
13
10

ch [tsh] [-k] [sh]
kh
ng 
qu  [kw] 
sh 
sch  [sk-] [-sh]
S'n  [shun]
th [t, tth]
th [d, dh, d, x]
chin  machine watch ciao
loch
singer/finger, bank
quit, queen 
shop, lush, chic 
school
illusion, suspicion
thin, breath [bretth]
then, breathe
ch,  foreign c
--
-- [Eng, Ing]
qu 
sh ch x
sch, sk
--
th 
th  d 
ch  tch
ch
ng, nk, n 
-- 
sh 
-
sion, cion, tion
th 
th the dth the
7
3
-
20
-
3
2
4
silent h
silent w
rouding w
w as vowel
honor, Allah
who, write, wren
low, slow, owe
- /u/ short u sound
silent
silent
abesent in go, silo, 
- Welsh w [bwk]
h   silent marker
redundant in lo sno
low, slow, owe
wow, cow, crawl
 
        Total 99
The most likely spelling alternative listed first above.  More on silent letters
The options eliminated by most reform notations are in bold face. 


14 PURE VOWELS AND THEIR FOUR MOST FREQUENT SPELLING

32 spellings for 14 vowel sounds must be taught in TO (but not in a phonemic alphabet)
e.g., /ou/ -  tone, goat,  told,  low, though,  obey,   owe,  oh, owing



 Spanglish -   toan    goat    toald   lo    tho       obey*      toatl/toatal    oa   owing 
 Truespel  -    toen    goet    toeld   loe  thoe     oebbae    toetul            oe   oewing
 Unifon     -    tOn     gOt     tOld    lO   TO       ObA        tOtcl             O    OiN

*If obey was written oabey, the stress would be on the fist syllable as in oapra [oprah]

Spanglish is positional, terminal long vowels are shortened because the short vowel can never occur in this position.  Single letter vowels are unstressed in Spanglish in multi-syllable words.  This practice makes Spanglish slightly less phonemic and slighlty more complicated than Truespel.

At least 21 code overlaps in TS must be taught, e.g., the spelling  ou is associated with over 7 sounds



<ou> -   out,   soup,  touch,  soul,   though,   cough,   thought,  thoughtless
OGD -    out,   suep,  tuch,   soel,    thoe,      kawf,     thawt.     thawtles
Span -    aut   suup    tuch    soal     tho         cof        thot        thaotles 
Truespel out   suep    tuch    soel     thoe       cauf       thaut      thautles


According to G. Dewey (1971), the basic problem is that each grapheme are used to represent not one but an average of 5 different sounds.  In a small abridged dictionary, one finds Dewey's 41 sounds represented 561 different ways.  The anomolies (irregular spellings) are reduced to 362 when one uses running word counts rather than the wide range of words found in a 42,000 word dictionary.  A sample of 100,000 words from various texts will include many repetitions and only about 7,000 different words.

THE PRINCIPLES OF SPELLING REFORM
By Henry Sweet (1845-1910) Oxford University Press, 1900

Introduction
General principles
Terminology
Nomic - traditional
Romic - reformed
Glossic - English value system
Choice of letters
& values for best represetation of speech  sounds
Transition
from and to the present spelling
Vowels
representation
R and its modifications
Unaccented vowels (schwa)
Consonants
Accent and quality
List of English
symbols
New types
(fonts)
by the author of History of English Sounds (Trübner), Henry Sweet
Written 100 years ago, it is still the best statement of the task and options
 
Phonemic Transcriptions:  IPA is the most popular code for dictionary pronunciation guides. Normally it looks rather odd when used for more than a couple of words.   Sweet's version below is quite attractive.  The version where he replaces the eth [ð] with the Greek delta is even better.  Spanglish, one of several ASCII-IPA notations compatible with e-mail, is an IPA  equivalent that uses no special characters or diacritics.  It is supposed to look less alien than IPA.  Please write and tell me [sbett@lycos.com ] if it achieves its aesthetic goal and if you could read it without a key.
IPA-International Phonetic Alphabet SS- Saxon-Spanglish Fonemic Notation
W'ns 'pon ' taim ð' bjutif'l do:t' 'v '
greit m'd3iò'n want'd mo:': p':lz tu: put 'm'h h': tre3ju':z."Luk thru: ð' sent': 'v  ð' mu:n hwen it iz blu:," sed h'r m'th' in æns': tu: h': kwestò'n, "Ju: mait faind j': ha':tz di:zair."
Wans apon a taim the [dhe] biutifal doter av a
greit majishan waanted mor perlz tu pwt amang her treazherz."Lwk thru the center av the muun hwen itt izz blu," sedd her mather inn aenser tu her queschan, "Yu mait faind yer haartz dizair." 

Spanglish as an i.t.a. and pronunciation guide vs. Spanglish as a reform proposal
 

The Phonological Structure of English and the Traditional Writing System
Any orthographic system for English should have a unique grapheme [symbol] for most of the 12 pure vowels and the important combinations of vowel phonemes [ei ai au ou...].  The sounds that Daniel Jones considered to be essential for a full description of English speech are listed below

According to Harry Lindgren, many proposed reform notations for English fail by not having a unique symbol for schwa.  Schwa [an unstressed mid lax vowel] is one of the most frequent sounds in English speech. Roughly 10% of your utterances are [uhs] or schwas.  Lindgren considered this oversight to be sufficient to eliminate the proposed notation from serious consideration. 

Lindgren's system had both u /^/ and schwa ['].  Many systems will merge these phonemes.  Truespel uses u for both, Spanglish uses a for both. Since Truespel always marks stress, it is easy to determine if the u is stressed or unstressed. Thus,  Truespel does have a way of referencing the schwa [or mid lax vowel] sound.  about = /'baut/ = ubbout

In British English (RP) there are 46 different speech sounds:  21 vowels, 25 consonants (Wijk, p. 13).  According to Longman's Dictionary of American English, General American [GA] has 45 speech sounds [21 v  24 c].  Longman's GA merges [a:] and [o].  [see how many phonemes?]

By showing stress, Truespel is able to eliminate the /^  '/ distinction,  reducing the number to 43.  Truespel does not differentiate between singer and fingger, the vowel in her and other, the long and short /turned c/ -both would be spelled [au].

Sixty symbols are normally used to represent the vowels.  Unfortunately, some are used for more than one sound. Most symbols in TO are polyvalent or multi-valued.  The codes overlap.
For instance, there are 29 ways to represent the sound /u:/ and 18 ways to represent the sound /ei/.
60 V-Markers found in TO: a, e, i, y, o, u, ar, er, ir, yr, or, ur, aa, ae, ai, ay, au, aw, ea, ee, ei, ey, eu, ew, ie, ye, oa, oe, oi, oy, oo, ou, ow, ue, ui, uy, aer, air, ayr, ear, eer, eir, eyr, eur, ew(e)r, iar, ier, yer, oar, oor, our, ow(e)r, uer, igh, aigh, augh, eigh, ough.

In TO, 44 symbols are used to represent 25 consonants:  21 single letters + 23 digraphs and trigraphs.  The 23 combined symbols  are shown below:
 
23 Marked consonants: ch, dg, gh, gn, gu, ng, ph, qu, sc, sch, sh, si, ssi, sci, ti, ci, ce, tch, th, wh, xc, and zi.   (ci, si, and zi are used for /sh/ and /zh/).

To represent 46 phonemes, English traditionally uses 104 different unigraphs, digraphs, and trigraphs.  Some are used more than once.

The most serious problem with the tradtional English orthography is its lack of predictability.  The chances that one can spell an unfamiliar word is 50% OR LESS.  This estimate is based on the fact that no phonemic notation will match TO more than 50% of the time.  The best attempt is about 40%.

Code overlaps are much more serious than using more than one letter or combination to represent a sound. Code overlap refers to the tendency for TO to use the same letter or combination to represent more than one phoneme. Each letter can refer to about 14different sounds.  The letters in TO are multi-valued or polyvalent.  (i.e., chaotic and confusing as opposed to alphabetic) 

Educators intent on teaching spelling and reading generally discard wh as a distinct phoneme, and make a few simplifications. 
 
 From Traditional spelling
 To truespell banner
25 consonants
44 symbols
200+ spellings
23 consonants
23 spellings
25 vowels
60 symbols
300+ spellings
17 vowels
17 spellings
50 phonemes
108 symbols
500+ spellings
42* phonemes
40 spellings
*Truespel adds 3 sounds by marking stress: schwa, schwa + R, and schwi [unstressed ee]

Orton phonograms  bibliography
  Truespel and Spanglish  asciibets [askee-bets] are used to indicate sound values below

The basic code:  Each phoneme represented by only one letter or digraph
 From sound to spelling.

25 consonants in English speech - 50 spellings in written English
23 pure consonants, j and ch are combinations

24 Consonant Phonemes [ng missing from both TO and Truespel]
with one spelling by position
b d h l p t v ng qu sh th tth
with one dominant spelling pattern
f g j k m n r s w x z ch
The z phoneme is generally spelled with an sz is dominant only in the initial position

26 spelling alternatives for 12 consonants plus 73 consonant clusters - 99 

Truespel and Phonemic Spanglish notations are used to clarify the following vowel sounds:

18 vowels have over 50 spellings in the traditional writing system - only 18 in Truespel
Truespel recognizes yue as a combination of a consonant and a vowel

18 Vowel Phonemes [two phonemes are merged her/er and o/o:]
click a letter to view a page showing the alternative spellings for these sounds - polyvalence
truespel    a   i   aar   oi  e   aa   u   ee  ae  ie  oe   yue  aw  oo   ue   ou  er  or
spanglish . a.  i.  ar    oy e   o.   'u    i    ei   ai   oa     yu    o    u.    u    au  'r   or
spanglish.ae  y  aar   oy e   aa   v    i    ei   ai  ow    yu    o    w    u    ou   r   or
Spanglish requires diacritics or markers to become a phonemic notation.  The alternative of recruiting r y w v as vowels [3rd line] can be visually disruptive  McGuinnes (1997), as above, ignores the schwa sound and most R-combinations.

32 spellings for 14 vowel sounds must be taught in TO (but not in a phonemic alphabet)
e.g., /ou/ -  tone, goat,  told,  low, though,  obey,   owe, oh



    Span -   to'n    go't    to'ld   lo'     tho'      o'bey     o'         [o' alternate ow]
 Truespel   toen   goet   toeld  loe   thoe     oebae   oe 

21 code overlaps must be taught for TO, e.g.,  ou is associated with over 7 sounds
<ou> -  out, soup,  touch,  soul,   though,  cough,  thought
OGD -   out,  suep,  tuch,   soel,   thoe,      kawf,    thawt
Span -   aut   sup    tu'ch    so'l      tho'        cof        thot 

According to McGuinnes (1997), most of the confusion in TO (the traditional orthography)  is caused by 26 alt. vowel spellings, 32 alt. consonant spellings, and 21 code overlaps.

Paul Hanna (19--) also thinks that the sheer number of orthographic options makes the traditional writing system confusing and overly complex.  The obvious solution is to reduce the number of spelling options and eliminate the code overlaps.  Both Truespel, Spanglish, and most reform orthographies do this. 

While there are no spelling rules without exceptions, there are probabilities and these can be learned and used to increase the matches with traditional spelling.

Reform rules:  We now have both a g and j in the alphabet.  Archaic historical spellings dating from a time when letter g had to be used for both sounds can now be dropped: guilty=gilty, gaol-jail, guage=gaje, ridge=rij, gem=jem, enough=enuf...

Single Consonant Spelling Alternatives  (idea from McGuinness, p. 103 and Orton)
Different ways the consonant sound is spelled at the beginning and end of words
Unlike the traditional orthography, Truespel always spells the same sound the same way
Letters such as the [u] and [e] in guage are silent markers. 
magic e endings usually indicate a long vowel:  exceptions have, give, ...
sound phoneme
key word     truespel
word beginning
word ending




h  [silent in some words]


l    [can be semi-vowel]
[can be semi-vowel]
n   [can be semi-vowel]
ng

r   [can be semi-vowel]

sh


w hw [semi-vowel]
[ks, gs, z,  sh/ch/s
[semi-vowel]
boot, bib, tribe     trieb
dog, did, mode     moed
fun, fife, enough    ennuf
got, gig, ghost,  guage  gaej
hot, who hue, casbah cazbaa
job  judge  juj, gem  jem
kick  cold  chasm  arctic 
log, lull,  till,  little 
man, comb,  column,  prism 
not, knot, gnome, foreign 
sing, singer, fing-ger
pig, pip, pipe 
red, roar, write, rare 
sat, sass, fence, confess
ship,  hush,  show
tot, tote, debt 
van, valve, save 
win, when, 
tax, xerox, Xena
yell, yacht
zip, xerox, size, fizz, his


ph
gu  gh
h  wh (hw) 
g
c  k  ch


n  kn  gn
-- 

r  wr ur er 
c  sc 
sh, ch


w  wh 
[foreign names

z, x
b, be
de
ff  ph  gh  fe
gue  gg  ge
-silent  terminal
ge  dge
ck  ic ke
'l  ll  el  le
m 'm mb  mn
n  gn  ne
ng
p   pe
'r er ur ir  re
ce se  se  ss  s 
sh  [c in Saxon]
bt ght te
ve ve
-- [ ow is a vowel]

-no consonant endings
s se  ze  zz  z 
ch [tsh] [-k] 
ng 
qu  [kw] 
sh 
sch  [sk-] [-sh] 
S'n  [shun] 
th [t, tth] 
th [d, dh, d, x]
chin  machine watch 
singer/finger, bank
quit, queen 
shop, lush 
school 
illusion, suspicion 
thin, breath [bretth]
then, breadth, breathe
ch 
--   [Eng, Ing]
qu 
sh ch sch  x 
sch, sk
-- 
th 
th  d 
ch  tch  che
ng 
-- 
sh  she

sion, cion, tion 
th 
th the dth ght
silent
silent w, 
w as vowel
marks 3 vowels
honor, herb, Allah 
who, write, wren 
- /u/ short u sound
- Welsh w [bwk] book
silent
silent
awl, crawl
taut, taught
h   silent marker
low [silo] snow 
wow, cow, allow
woe, low, know
sk
yu
skunk, scheme, schism
unit, sure, argue, argument
sk sch sc
u
sk
u ew ue ure
The most likely spelling alternative listed first above.  Magic e endings have to do with vowel
The options eliminated by most reform notations are in bold face. 
References:
Albrow, K.H. 1972. The English Writing System.  London: Longmans
Carney, Edward.  1994. A Survey of English Spelling.  London: Routledge
Coulmas, Florian. 1989. The Writing Systems of the World. Oxford: Basic
Coulmas, Florian. 1996. Encyclopedia of Writing Systems. Oxford: Blackwell. 
Crystal, David. 1995. Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language
Dewey, Godfrey. 1971. English spelling: Roadblock to reading. NY: Teachers College Press.
Dewey, Godfrey. 1970. Relative Frequency of English Spelling. NY: Teachers College Press. 
Haas, W. 1970. Phonographic Translation. Manchester: Manchester University Press
Hanna, Paul R., Hanna, J.S. Hodges, R.E. & Rudorf, E.H. (1966). PhonemeGrapheme
  Correspondences as Cues to Spelling Improvement, Doc.OE-32008, Washington, D.C.: 
  U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare.USGPO
Hanna, Paul (1992) Spelling: Structure and Strategies. University Press of American
Jones, Daniel. 1950. The Pronunciation of English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 
Lindgren, Harry. 1969. Spelling Reform: A New Approach. Alpha Books
McGuinness, Diane 1997. Why Our Children Cant Read. Free Press
Martin, J. H. & Friedberg, A. 1986, Writing to Read. NY, Warner Books 
Pitman, James & St. John. 1970. Alphabets and Reading. London: Pitman
Scragg, D.G. 1974. A History of English Spelling.  Manchester: Manchester University Press
 

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