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The Five
Basic Structures of English Spelling
Patterns:
The
Simple, Fancy, Insane, Tricky, and Scrunched
Up
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Basic |
Intermediate |
Advanced |
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Simple |
cat big call
dog run stay
jump ate shop
quick queen |
shunned chewing
missed pinning
outfielder preacher
defroster
understanding |
peddled strictly
belittled
reenacted
enabled shackled misunderstandings |
|
Fancy |
onion
notice
station caution
special crucial
Christ sessions |
suspicious
suspicions
unique
personalities
initially linguistic
|
flambeau Chablis
ennui psychology psychic
rendezvous
picturesque mosque |
|
Insane |
one does was
have laugh laughter cousin
daughter
should |
lingerie aye draught
soldering indictment
salve corps Chanukah
renege cologne |
hors
d'oeuvres ciao
conch jai alai
Qin
ribald loughs
victuals quays
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|
Tricky |
deer/dear aunt/ant
be/bee bear/bare
red/read/reed |
do/dew/due aisle/isle/I'll
missed/mist passed/past
affect/effect
lox/loughs
accept/except |
allusion/illusion
cache/cash
spade/spayed
descent/dissent |
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Scrunched
Up |
It’s didn't Mr. Mrs.
Ms. Ave. Dr. St. they’re we’re
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'tis 'twas
ASAP CIA
PED XING
used
to
/ "usta"
@#$%&*!
going to
/ "gonna" |
e.g.
"whudja"
Ste. Y2K i.e. sic
et. al. SQ3R WPA
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Definitions:
-
Simple:
Words that have a base of
one syllable. The word fishermen
has three syllables but its base is the
one syllable word fish. The
-le words such as little castle
candle can be considered as one
syllable words (or the only two-syllable
based words to be "Simple."
- The "BASIC
Simple Words" are taught in almost all
phonics programs.
- The "Intermediate
Simple Words" generally are not taught
specifically or intensively.
What usually occurs is that the base
word such as bat is taught but
not the other structural forms such as
bats batted batting batter batters
battered battering battery and
batteries. It generally is
assumed that students can apply the
rules about adding -s -ed -ing -er etc.
Some can and do. But certainly not
all.
- The "Advanced
Simple Words" are usually assumed to be
learned by osmosis.
- The "Fancy
Words" that those the usually cannot be
reduced to a one syllable base.
These words have come into our language
from the Latin Greek French German
Spanish Hebrew Arabic Chinese Japanese
Sanskrit etc with their basic phonic
patterns (which are different from
English) retained.
- The "Basic
Fancy Patterns" are sometimes taught or
encountered in some reading programs.
Some examples of these are the -tion =
"shun" or the -cial = "shull" as in
special
or the -cious = "shus" as in precious..
- The "Intermediate
Fancy Patterns" are rarely
systematically taught. Examples of
these are -tial = "shull" as in impartial
the ch = "sh" as in
chef
or the -et = "ay" as in buffet.
- The "Advanced
Fancy Patterns" are not taught
specifically or intensively and are
usually assume to be learned by osmosis.
Examples of these are -eau = "oh" as
chateau
u = w as in suite
and suede
and -ique = "eek" as in mystique.
- The "Insane
words" are not pronounceable using any
standard rules of phonics.
- The "Basic
Insane Words" such as does was
were gone and eyes are taught or
encountered in most reading programs as
sight words.
- The "Intermediate
Insane Words" are not taught
specifically nor intensively. They
are words such as salve
lingerie and soldering.
- The "Advanced
Insane Words" are usually assumed to be
learned by osmosis. Examples of
these are ciao hors d'oeuvres
and victuals (often misspelled as
vittles even by highly educated
people).
- The "Tricky"
words are homophones homographs and
words with similar configurations that
tend to confuse or trick the writer.
- The "Basic"
Tricky Words are taught or
encountered in most reading programs.
Words such as red/read be/bee eye/I
dear/deer are generally taught to
mastery although some basic tricky words
such as its/its their/there/they're
fair/fare often are not mastered.
- The "Intermediate
Tricky Words" generally are neither
taught specifically nor not intensively.
Examples of these are effect/affect
child abuse/abuse a child
to present a present
accept/except/expect .
- The "Advanced
Tricky Words" are usually assumed to be
learned by osmosis. Examples of
these are allusion/illusion resume
writing a job resume
material/materiel and
personal/personnel.
- The "Scrunched
Up Words are those word phrases for
which linguists have coined the esoteric
terms sandhi
(pronounced "Sunday") and synalepha
(also synaloepha and
synalephe) Not only do
linguists disagree about what
constitutes synalepha they disagree on
how to spell it. We have expanded
upon the word phrases to include
acronyms and abbreviations.
- The "Basic
Scrunched Up Words" are generally taught
or encountered in most reading programs.
Examples of these are the common
contractions I'm I'll don't doesn't
won't.
- The "Intermediate
Scrunched Up Words" are rarely taught in
any reading/spelling program. The
lack of teaching these allows the
proliferation of misspellings as "were
gonna, hafta, should of, gotta, and
wudjuhgit" for "we're going to, have to,
should have, got to, and what did you
get."
- The "Advanced
Scrunched Up Words" generally are not
taught specifically or intensively.
Rather, they are assumed that with
reading and higher education they can be
learned by osmosis. This is not
true as evidenced by the numbers of
educated people who say "EYE EE" when
reading the abbreviation i.e.
(which stands for id est
and should be read as "that is" or those
who say "EE Period JEE Period" instead
of "for example." Included
are acronyms such as snafu (situation
normal all "fouled" up) as well as the
Latin word sic which simply
means: "Yes, I know that somewhere in
the matter I quoted there is a
misspelling and/or incorrect syntax, but
I'm quoting directly and I am not
allowed to edit the quotation, so please
don't write to me about it."
The AVKO Educational
Research Foundation would like to see the
educational establishment (which includes
the universities and the publishing
industry) begin to provide training and
materials to the teachers so that students
can be taught and not just left to their own
devices to learn their language.
For
methods that can be used to teach all five
varieties of English Spelling teachers
and/or homeschooling parents may want to use
The Teaching of Reading & Spelling: a
Continuum from Kindergarten through College.
For a
source book in which a teacher, researcher,
writer, publisher, or homeschooling parent
can look up any word in the English language
(except bathroom wall words) and find all
the words that share the same pattern click
on
The Patterns of English Spelling.
For a
Spelling Series that contains over 35,000
words arranged sequentially by the
difficulty of the easiest word within the
pattern click on
Sequential Spelling and print out
the first seven lessons that lead students
into learning to spell the difficult word
"beginning" by starting with the easiest
word "in."
For help
in teaching students learn the basic
"Tricky Words"
click here.
For help
in teaching students the "Scrunched Up"
words or eliminating their phonic
misspellings of gonna, were sposta, you
hafta, etc., go to
Speech to Spelling.
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