spelling

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Words from Latin Print this page Study Words 1. inane 2. relevant 3. impetuous 4. ambivalent 5. dejected 6. postmortem 7. incriminate 8. access 9. plausible 10. interrupt [1] 11. alliteration 12. refugee 13. amicable 14. lucid [2] 15. percolate 16. meticulous 17. fastidious 18. trajectory 19. animosity 20. implement 21. ambiguity 22. curriculum 23. omnivorous 24. bellicose 25. electoral 26. crescent [3] 27. obsequious 28. transect 29. precipice 30. susceptible 31. condolences [ 4] 32. benefactor 33. candidate 34. bugle 35. formidable 36. canary 37. subterfuge 38. abdicate 39. lunatic 40. carnivore [5] 41. gregarious 42. ostentatious 43. prosaic [6] 44. herbivore 45. prodigal 46. magnanimous 47. benevolent 48. mercurial 49. simile 50. jovial 51. ridiculous 52. innate 53. obstinate 54. discern 55. mediocre 56. insidious 57. rupture 58. precipitate 59. erudite 60. colloquial 61. intractable 62. exuberant [7] 63. ingenious 64. retrospective 65. ominous 66. vulnerable 67. omnipotent 68. consensus 69. discipline 70. alleviate 71. spectrum 72. prescription 73. capitulation 74. incredulous 75. affinity 76. necessary 77. adjacent 78. dissect 79. conjecture 80. imperative 81. predicate 82. corporal 83. patina 84. Capricorn 85. participant 86. library 87. cognition 88. primal 89. filament 90. unity 91. ventilate 92. aquatic 93. igneous 94. reptile 95. providence 96. message 97. foliate 98. nasal 99. opera 100. renovate 101. credentials 102. temporal 103. canine 104. measure 105. credible 106. femininity 107. confidence 108. triumvirate 109. popularity 110. diary 111. humble

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Page 1: spelling

Words from LatinPrint this page

Study Words1. inane2. relevant3. impetuous4. ambivalent5. dejected6. postmortem7. incriminate8. access9. plausible10. interrupt [1]11. alliteration12. refugee13. amicable14. lucid [2]15. percolate16. meticulous17. fastidious18. trajectory19. animosity20. implement21. ambiguity22. curriculum23. omnivorous24. bellicose25. electoral26. crescent [3]27. obsequious28. transect29. precipice30. susceptible31. condolences [4]32. benefactor33. candidate34. bugle35. formidable36. canary37. subterfuge38. abdicate39. lunatic40. carnivore [5]41. gregarious

42. ostentatious43. prosaic [6]44. herbivore45. prodigal46. magnanimous47. benevolent48. mercurial49. simile50. jovial51. ridiculous52. innate53. obstinate54. discern55. mediocre56. insidious57. rupture58. precipitate59. erudite60. colloquial61. intractable62. exuberant [7]63. ingenious64. retrospective65. ominous66. vulnerable67. omnipotent68. consensus69. discipline70. alleviate71. spectrum72. prescription73. capitulation74. incredulous75. affinity76. necessary77. adjacent78. dissect79. conjecture80. imperative81. predicate82. corporal83. patina84. Capricorn85. participant86. library87. cognition

88. primal89. filament90. unity91. ventilate92. aquatic93. igneous94. reptile95. providence96. message97. foliate98. nasal99. opera100. renovate101. credentials102. temporal103. canine104. measure105. credible106. femininity107. confidence108. triumvirate109. popularity110. diary111. humble112. vivisection113. strict114. prosecute115. contiguous116. ductile117. gradient118. current119. perfidy120. fidelity121. incorruptible

Challenge Words

1. soliloquy2. accommodate3. pernicious [8]4. efficacy5. visceral6. exacerbate7. indigenous8. belligerent9. vernacular

Page 2: spelling

10. infinitesimal11. recalcitrant12. innocuous13. precocious14. ameliorate

15. commensurate16. facetious17. prerogative18. ubiquitous19. egregious

20. aggregate21. tertiary22. corpuscle23. perennial

Spelling Tips1. 1 One of the hardest things to remember about words from Latin is whether

an internal consonant (like rrin interrupt) is doubled. To reinforce your memory of the correct spelling, try to remember related words all together (like interrupt along with interruption or necessary along with necessity).

2. 2 The \ü\ sound (as in ooze) is nearly always spelled with u in words from Latin. It typically follows a \d\, \j\, \l\, \r\, or \s\ sound. After other consonants, this sound normally becomes \yü\ (as in bugle, subterfuge,ambiguity, and prosecute and in one pronunciation of refugee).

3. 3 Beware of words like crescent in which the \s\ sound is spelled with sc in words from Latin. Other examples include visceral, discern, discipline, susceptible, and corpuscle.

4. 4 When you hear within a word from Latin the \s\ sound followed by any of the sounds of e (long, short, or schwa), there's a possibility that the \s\ sound is spelled with c as in exacerbate, access, adjacent,condolences, facetious, and necessary.

5. 5 The letter i is a vowel often used to connect two Latin word elements. If the connecting vowel sound is a schwa (\ə\) and you must guess at the spelling of this sound, the letter i might be a good guess: Seecarnivore and herbivore. Other examples include non–study-list words that end in iform such as oviformand pediform.

6. 6 The letter k rarely appears in words from Latin, and its sound is nearly always represented by c as incanary, prosaic, canine, mediocre, Capricorn, cognition, ductile, incorruptible, vernacular, innocuous, and many other words on the list.

7. 7 The letter x often gets the pronunciation \gz\ in words from Latin (as in exacerbate and exuberant).

8. 8 The combination ious ends many adjectives of Latin origin. When the consonant that precedes ious isc or t, the sound of the final syllable is \shəs\ as in facetious, ostentatious, pernicious, and precocious. It is important to keep in mind that several adjectives from Latin ending with this sound end in eous rather than ious. In such instances, the definitions of the words usually contain phrases such as "consisting of," "resembling," or "having the characteristic of." Examples include non–study–list words herbaceous,cetaceous, and lilaceous.

© 2008 Merriam-Webster, Incorporated

Page 3: spelling

Words from ArabicPrint this page

Study Words1. azure2. Islamic3. sultan4. artichoke5. mummy [1]6. tarragon7. adobe8. mohair9. borax10. talc11. arsenal12. lemon13. tuna14. admiral15. hazard16. apricot17. carmine18. monsoon19. average20. gazelle [2]21. crimson22. orange23. sequin24. macrame25. algebra26. guitar

27. nabob28. giraffe29. mattress30. elixir31. saffron32. cotton33. albatross [3]34. zero35. safari [4]36. magazine37. zenith38. alfalfa39. imam40. mosque41. alcohol42. tariff43. lilac44. alcove45. massage46. henna [5]47. alchemy48. sugar49. taj50. mahal51. khan52. ghoul

Challenge Words

1. muslin

2. camphor3. algorithm4. minaret5. tamarind6. carafe7. julep8. marzipan9. nenuphar10. alcazar11. tahini12. Qatari13. alkali14. serendipity15. nadir16. douane17. fennec18. hafiz19. azimuth20. bezoar21. halal22. alim23. Swahili24. serdab25. mihrab26. salaam27. mukhtar28. khor29. foggara30. diffa31. coffle

Spelling Tips1. 1 Double consonants are often seen in words from Arabic. More often than

not, they occur in the middle of a word as in mummy, cotton, henna, foggara, coffle, tarragon, and several other words on the list. Their appearance at the end of a word (as in albatross and tariff) is usually because of the spelling conventions of English or some other language that the word passed through to get here.

2. 2 A typical word from Arabic has three consonant sounds, with or without vowels between them.Gazelle, safari, talc, carafe, mahal, tahini, alkali, hafiz, and salaam are typical examples.

3. 3 Note how many words on this list begin with al: This spelling can be traced to the definite article al("the") in Arabic, which sometimes gets borrowed along with a word. Most of the time the spelling is alin English, but note el in elixir.

Page 4: spelling

4. 4 A long e sound (\ē\) at the end of a word from Arabic is often spelled with i as in safari and several other words on the list but may also be spelled with y as in mummy and alchemy.

5. 5 The schwa sound (\ə\) at the end of a word from Arabic is usually spelled with a as in henna, tuna,algebra, alfalfa, foggara, and diffa.

Words from Asian LanguagesPrint this page

Study Words1. dugong2. guru3. cushy4. seersucker5. jungle6. oolong7. nirvana8. bangle9. cummerbund10. juggernaut11. pangolin12. mahatma13. rupee14. mongoose15. shampoo16. typhoon17. bamboo

18. jackal19. dungaree20. bungalow21. gunnysack22. chutney23. karma24. jute25. yamen26. raj27. kama28. pundit29. loot30. kavya31. jiva32. pandit33. chintz34. patel

Challenge Words

1. gymkhana2. basmati3. gingham4. mandir5. bhalu6. gourami7. masala8. raita9. asana10. batik11. charpoy12. durwan13. mahout14. prabhu15. Buddha16. topeng17. tanha18. lahar19. jnana20. Holi

Words from FrenchPrint this page

Study Words1. peloton2. barrage3. chagrin [1]4. pacifism5. manicure6. altruism

7. bureaucracy8. mascot9. parfait10. mystique11. layette [2]12. boutique

13. dressage14. croquet15. gorgeous16. denture17. mirage18. denim

Page 5: spelling

19. cachet [3]20. neologism21. beige22. diplomat23. motif24. suave25. foyer [4]26. clementine27. ambulance28. rehearse29. leotard30. prairie [5]31. diorama32. entourage33. fuselage34. boudoir35. collage [6]36. amenable37. expertise38. matinee39. plateau40. sortie41. croquette42. physique [7]43. elite44. deluxe45. nougat46. rouge [8]

47. escargot48. crochet49. regime50. doctrinaire51. tutu52. bevel53. menu54. egalitarian55. quiche [9]56. fatigue57. garage58. morgue59. stethoscope60. vogue61. musicale62. palette63. flamboyant64. baton65. souvenir66. impasse67. finesse68. maladroit

Challenge Words

1. gauche2. rapport3. camouflage

4. genre5. virgule6. debacle7. fusillade [10]8. saboteur9. renaissance10. chauvinism11. recidivist12. chassis13. détente14. raconteur15. mayonnaise [11

]16. surveillance17. repertoire18. dossier19. taupe20. poignant21. garçon22. croissant23. ecru24. lieutenant25. protégé26. mélange27. blasé28. fête29. ingenue30. rendezvous

Spelling Tips1. 1 French nearly always spells the \sh\ sound with ch, and this spelling of the

sound is very common in words from French. Chagrin, chauvinism, and crochet are examples.

2. 2 A word from French ending with a stressed \et\ is usually spelled with ette as in layette and croquette.

3. 3 A long a sound (\ā\) at the end of a word from French can be spelled a number of ways. One of the more common ways is with et as in cachet, croquet, and crochet.

4. 4 One way to spell long a at the end of a word from French is with er as in dossier and in foyer. (Most Americans, however, do not pronounce the ending of foyer with a long a.)

5. 5 A long e sound (\ē\) at the end of a word from French can be spelled with ie as in prairie and sortie. (But see exercise 4 under Now You Try for another spelling of the long e ending.)

6. 6 Words ending with an \äzh\ sound are common in French. This sound is spelled age as

Page 6: spelling

in collage,mirage, dressage, garage, barrage, camouflage, entourage, and fuselage.

7. 7 A \k\ sound at the end of a word from French is often spelled que as in physique, mystique, andboutique.

8. 8 The \ü\ sound (as in rouge and many other words on the list) in words from French is usually spelled with ou. Sometimes, however, it is spelled with u as in tutu and ecru.

9. 9 When the \sh\ sound occurs at the end of a word from French, there is nearly always a silent e that follows it, as in quiche and gauche.

10. 10 Words ending with an \äd\ sound are common in French. This sound is spelled ade as in fusillade.

11. 11 French speakers have a number of vowels that English speakers modify in pronunciation. Our way of pronouncing the French aise (pronounced \ez\ in French) is usually \āz\.

EponymsPrint this page

Study Words1. praline2. magnolia3. boysenberry4. hosta5. poinsettia6. macadamia7. salmonella8. newton9. saxophone10. tortoni11. greengage12. angstrom13. gardenia14. melba15. tantalize16. zinnia17. quisling18. begonia

19. samaritan20. Panglossian21. quixote22. jeremiad23. hector24. Geronimo25. shrapnel26. vulcanize27. Frankenstein28. Boswell29. ampere30. cupid31. Fletcherism32. yahoo33. diesel34. bandersnatch35. Crusoe36. mentor37. Dracula

Challenge Words

1. forsythia2. madeleine3. bromeliad4. mercerize5. Fahrenheit6. narcissistic7. dahlia8. Baedeker9. philippic10. guillotine11. Bobadil12. mesmerize13. gnathonic14. pasteurize15. Croesus16. braggadocio

Words from GermanPrint this page

Page 7: spelling

Study Words1. angst [1]2. pretzel3. waltz4. haversack5. nosh6. sauerbraten7. hinterland8. verboten9. liverwurst10. streusel11. umlaut12. wanderlust13. eiderdown14. schnauzer15. lederhosen16. kohlrabi17. sitzmark18. langlauf19. autobahn20. Backstein21. inselberg22. gestalt23. einkorn24. kitsch [2]25. gestapo26. schloss27. rucksack

28. echt29. bratwurst30. knapsack31. feldspar32. poltergeist33. noodle34. spareribs35. Meistersinger [

3]36. pumpernickel37. Bildungsroman38. strudel39. bagel40. hamster41. cobalt42. nachtmusik43. vorlage [4]44. graupel45. Wagnerian46. cringle47. fife48. glitz49. homburg50. kuchen51. pitchblende52. spritz [5]53. prattle54. zwinger

55. spitz56. realschule57. panzer58. stollen59. dachshund60. seltzer

Challenge Words

1. schadenfreude [6]2. dreidel3. weimaraner4. ersatz5. fräulein6. blitzkrieg [7]7. gesundheit8. pfeffernuss9. edelweiss [8]10. glockenspiel11. rottweiler12. schottische13. anschluss14. wedel15. springerle16. zeitgeber17. pickelhaube18. schnecke19. Weissnichtwo

Spelling Tips1. 1 Don't shy away from consonant clusters! German words often have

combinations of three or more consonants that don't occur in thoroughly English words. Examples include ngst in angst, sch inschadenfreude, schn in schnauzer, and nschl in anschluss.

2. 2 A \k\ sound in a word from German is usually spelled with k at the beginning of a word or syllable (as inkitsch and einkorn) and often with ck at the end of a word or syllable (as in knapsack and glockenspiel).

3. 3 A long i sound (\ī\) usually has the spelling ei in words from German, as in fräulein, Meistersinger,zeitgeber, and several other words on the list.

4. 4 The \f\ sound, especially at the beginning of a word, is sometimes spelled with v in German words as in vorlage. Other examples include the non–study-list words volkslied and herrenvolk.

5. 5 The letter z is far more common in German than in English. Note that its pronunciation is not usually the same as English \z\. When it follows a t,

Page 8: spelling

which is common, the pronunciation is \s\ as in spritz,pretzel, blitzkrieg, and several other words on the list.

6. 6 The \sh\ sound in words of German origin is usually spelled sch as in schadenfreude, whether at the beginning or end of a word or syllable. In schottische, you get it in both places!

7. 7 A long e sound (\ē\) usually has the spelling ie in words from German, as in blitzkrieg andglockenspiel.

8. 8 The letter w is properly pronounced as \v\ in German, as you hear in one pronunciation of edelweissand in wedel and Weissnichtwo. Many German words, however, have become so anglicized that this pronunciation has vanished. Most Americans, for example, say "bratwurst," not "bratvurst”.

Words from Slavic LanguagesPrint this page

Study Words1. gulag2. parka3. Slav4. robot5. samovar6. kremlin7. troika8. slave9. mammoth10. Siberian11. tundra12. Permian13. kishke14. glasnost15. paprika16. sable17. kasha18. nebbish

19. polka20. Bolshevik21. vampire22. sputnik23. knish24. cravat25. babushka26. Soviet27. Borzoi28. gopak29. cheka30. sevruga31. trepak32. babka33. purga34. baba35. cossack36. nelma

37. kovsh38. lokshen39. feldsher40. barabara41. aul

Challenge Words

1. balalaika2. kielbasa3. tchotchke4. barukhzy5. perestroika6. apparatchik7. commissar8. tokamak9. pogrom10. taiga11. Beetewk

Words from DutchPrint this page

Study Words1. cockatoo2. keelhaul3. harpoon4. furlough5. bowery6. easel

7. holster8. freebooter9. waffle10. trawl11. uproar12. beleaguer

13. cruller14. yacht15. wiseacre16. brackish17. decoy18. caboose

Page 9: spelling

19. buckwheat20. walrus21. howitzer22. crimp23. bluff24. stipple25. floss26. cruiser27. hustle28. klompen29. polder30. bundle31. catkin32. splice33. Flemish34. grabble35. huckster36. frolic37. ravel38. tattle39. scum40. trek41. scrabble42. clapboard43. gruff44. isinglass45. excise46. blister

47. rabbit48. package49. muddle50. handsome51. foist52. staple53. gulden54. mart55. screen56. guilder57. etch58. Netherlander59. dune60. croon61. ticket62. buckwagon63. hock64. boodle65. guy66. daffodil67. loiter68. potash69. scow70. wintergreen71. trigger72. stripe73. bruin74. skipper

75. waywiser76. spoor77. mizzle78. school79. pickle80. snuff

Challenge Words

1. mynheer2. waterzooi3. flense4. muishond5. witloof6. springbok7. maelstrom8. bobbejaan9. keeshond10. voortrekker11. uitlander12. hollandaise13. galjoen14. schipperke15. apartheid16. hartebeest17. keest18. wainscot19. roodebok

Words from Old EnglishPrint this page

Study Words1. quell [1]2. barrow3. dearth4. bower5. paddock6. blithe7. keen8. mongrel9. reckless10. alderman11. whirlpool12. belay [2]13. cleanser

14. dreary [3]15. bequeath16. sallow [4]17. dross18. lithe19. gristle20. earwig21. fickle22. nestle [5]23. fennel24. nostril25. abide26. behest

27. slaughter [6]28. gospel29. furlong30. linseed31. nether32. fathom33. nightingale34. farthing35. threshold36. kith37. wanton38. loam [7]39. yield

Page 10: spelling

40. mattock41. hawthorn42. tithe43. behoove44. forlorn45. quiver46. hustings47. aspen48. mermaid49. anvil50. barley51. linden52. hassock53. orchard54. hearth [8]55. watery56. fiend57. goatee58. earthenware59. windily

60. dealership61. bookkeeping62. fiery63. learned64. nosiest65. creepy66. errand67. daily68. gnat69. broadleaf70. stringy71. dairy72. workmanship73. newfangled74. timely75. dogged76. mootable77. womanly78. manhandle79. folksiness

80. worrisome81. roughhewn82. knavery83. hurdle84. kipper85. hundredth86. icicle87. pinafore88. yieldable89. hue

Challenge Words

1. heifer2. mistletoe3. salve4. kirtle5. Wiccan6. shrieval7. chary

Spelling Tips1. 1 Old English likes double consonants following short vowels, especially if the

vowel is in a stressed syllable. Examples include quell, paddock, mattock, sallow, fennel, hassock, errand, barrow, kipper, andWiccan.

2. 2 A long a sound (\ā\) at the end of words from Old English is nearly always spelled ay as in belay.

3. 3 Long e (\ē\) at the end of an adjective or adverb from Old English is nearly always spelled with y. Examples include dreary, watery, windily, fiery, creepy, daily, stringy, timely, womanly, and chary.

4. 4 Long o (\ō\) at the end of words from Old English is typically spelled with ow as in sallow and barrow. By contrast, a long o at the end of a word in many languages that English has borrowed from is simply spelled with o.

5. 5 When the syllable \səl\ ends words from Old English, it is nearly always spelled stle, with the t being silent (as in gristle and nestle).

6. 6 Silent gh after a vowel is common in words from Old English, as in slaughter. Silent gh usually appears after i in words like plight (not on the study list) and nightingale, and it signals that the vowel is pronounced \ī\.

7. 7 The vowel combination oa in words from Old English is nearly always pronounced as long o (\ō\) as inloam and goatee. Examples not on the study list include shoal, boastful, and gloaming.

8. 8 Silent e on the end or not? For words from Old English that end in either hard th (\th\) or soft th (\th\), remember this: More often than not, soft th will have a silent e at the end of the word. Consider, for

Page 11: spelling

example, bequeath, dearth, kith, hearth, and hundredth versus blithe, lithe, and tithe. Interestingly, the word blithe can be pronounced both ways.

Words from New World LanguagesPrint this page

Study Words1. condor2. iguana3. hurricane [1]4. kahuna5. hogan6. jerky7. muskrat8. hominy9. wigwam10. pampas11. caribou [2]12. toboggan13. persimmon14. quinine15. powwow16. bayou17. coyote [3]18. tamale19. poi20. cashew

21. luau22. totem23. mahimahi24. hickory25. cacao26. kona27. malihini28. wikiwiki29. Tuckahoe30. pecan31. chipotle32. skunk33. woodchuck [4]34. chocolate35. muumuu36. puma37. tomato38. maraca39. petunia40. jaguar

41. buccaneer42. llama43. succotash44. caucus45. wampum46. mole47. toucan

Challenge Words

1. opossum2. terrapin3. ocelot4. hoomalimali5. coati6. jacamar7. ipecac8. menhaden9. sachem

Spelling Tips1. 1 Remember that words settling down in English are often spelled according

to English word patterns. If you're completely unsure of how to spell a word from a New World language, you can try just "sounding it out." This strategy would work for hurricane, muskrat, wigwam, and several other words on the list.

2. 2 Take note of the language(s) a word may have traveled through on its way to English, for the path to English often gives a clue about spelling. For example, if it had been up to an English speaker, the \ü\ sound at the end of caribou would probably have been spelled oo; but the influence of French gives us the current spelling because French usually spells this sound ou.

3. 3 Coyote shows evidence of having passed through Spanish on its way to English: The voiced final e is often seen in Spanish words. Two other examples on this list are tamale and mole.

4. 4 Remember what folk etymology is? Words that entered English from New World languages were prime candidates for this process. If parts of a native word sounded familiar, they were often spelled by the settlers in a familiar way, as in woodchuck. Muskrat is also probably a result of folk etymology.

Page 12: spelling

Words from GreekPrint this page

Study Words1. lethargy2. android3. chronic4. biopsy5. irony6. automaton7. enthusiasm8. synopsis9. homogeneous10. odyssey11. megalopolis12. acme [1]13. synonym14. orthodox15. aristocracy16. calypso17. patriarch18. hierarchy19. character [2]20. isobar21. asterisk22. eclectic23. melancholy24. stoic25. chronology26. eulogy27. didactic28. cosmetic29. Spartan30. geothermal31. cynical [3]32. homonym33. cryptic34. hypothesis35. academy36. pentathlon37. antibiotic38. diatribe39. etymology40. hydraulic [4]41. trauma42. hygiene

43. semantics44. thesaurus45. phenomenon [5

]46. cosmos47. protagonist48. acronym49. paradox50. synchronous51. misanthropy52. sarcasm53. ephemeral54. polygon55. nemesis56. syntax57. eureka58. topography59. panic60. apostrophe61. geranium62. metaphor63. spherical64. xylophone [6]65. dynamic66. myriad67. epiphany68. apathy69. synergy70. amnesia71. philanthropy72. democracy73. strategy [7]74. diagnosis75. topical76. matriarch77. endemic78. analysis [8]79. rhetoric80. eponym81. agnostic82. dogma83. idiom84. thermal85. dyslexia

86. Olympian87. allegory88. pragmatic89. adamant90. protocol91. tragic92. hydrology93. polymer94. notochord95. biblical96. ergonomic97. mathematics98. tachometer99. protein100. rhinoceros101. hyphen102. autopsy103. pyre104. herpetology105. angelic106. tritium107. androcentric108. demotic109. geode110. hedonism111. periscope112. geoponics113. asthmogenic114. monotonous115. amphibious116. symbiosis117. macron118. periphery

Challenge Words

1. dichotomy2. misogynist3. hypocrisy4. diphthong5. mnemonic6. anomaly7. zephyr8. hippopotamus

Page 13: spelling

9. euphemism10. anachronism11. metamorphosis12. hyperbole13. arachnid

14. paradigm15. Eocene16. gynarchy17. pneumatic18. Hemerocallis

19. cynosure20. philhellenism21. euthanasia22. philately23. cacophony

Spelling Tips1. 1 In a few words from Greek, e appears at the end of a word and has

long e sound \ē\: Some examples are acme, apostrophe, and hyperbole.2. 2 A \k\ sound in English often represents a sound from Greek that we don't

actually use, and the most common spelling of this sound in English is ch: See anachronism, arachnid, character, chronic,chronology, dichotomy, hierarchy, matriarch, melancholy, patriarch, synchronous, notochord,tachometer, and gynarchy.

3. 3 The most frequent sound that y gets in words from Greek is short i (\i\) as in acronym, calypso, cryptic,cynical, dyslexia, eponym, homonym, myriad, Olympian, synchronous, synergy, synonym, synopsis,syntax, symbiosis and polymer.

4. 4 A long i sound (\ī\) in a word that comes from Greek is sometimes represented by y, especially after h, as in hydraulic, hydrology, hygiene, hyperbole, hyphen, hypothesis, dynamic, cynosure, gynarchy,xylophone and pyre.

5. 5 In ancient Greek, the letter phi (pronounced \fī\) represented a breathy or "aspirated" version of the sound that is represented in English by f. Speakers of Roman-alphabet languages did not have this sound or a corresponding letter, so they substituted the \f\ sound but memorialized the original sound ofphi by using ph to spell it. As a result, the English \f\ sound almost always appears as ph in words of Greek origin. Consider, for example: amphibious, apostrophe, cacophony, diphthong, epiphany,euphemism, hyphen, metamorphosis, metaphor, periphery, phenomenon, philanthropy, philately,philhellenism, spherical, topography, xylophone, and zephyr. Hundreds of words in English derived from Greek show this spelling.

6. 6 The letter o is the vowel most often used to connect two Greek word elements. If the connecting vowel sound is a schwa (\ə\) as in xylophone, notochord, orthodox, ergonomic, geoponics, and asthmogenicand you must guess at the spelling of this sound, the letter o is a very good guess. The non–study-list words hypnotist, geometric, and electrolyte are among the many, many words made of Greek word elements connected by o.

7. 7 The \j\ sound is always spelled with g in words from Greek. Why? When the \j\ sound appears in words of Greek origin, it does so as an anglicized pronunciation of a root originally pronounced with a hard g. Note that no j appears in any of the words on this list!

8. 8 A schwa in words from Greek is occasionally spelled with y: See analysis, etymology, misogynist,odyssey, and zephyr.

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Words from ItalianPrint this page

Study Words1. staccato2. ballot3. confetti [1]4. semolina5. influenza6. cavalry7. piazza8. cadenza9. pistachio10. spinet11. cantata12. incognito [2]13. vendetta14. contraband15. mascara16. graffiti17. credenza18. parapet19. falsetto20. ditto21. provolone [3]22. extravaganza23. scampi24. belladonna25. gondola26. rotunda27. cauliflower28. galleria29. regatta

30. crescendo [4]31. balcony32. portfolio33. antipasto34. libretto35. virtuoso36. harmonica37. maestro38. bravura39. fresco40. stucco [5]41. inferno42. ballerina43. malaria44. grotto45. harpsichord46. allegro47. virtuosa48. spaghetti49. piccolo50. ravioli51. vibrato52. pesto53. aria54. bambino55. salami56. Parmesan57. oratorio58. finale59. scenario60. contrapuntal

61. illuminati62. concerto63. macaroni64. palmetto65. bandit66. fiasco67. cameo68. sonata69. coloratura

Challenge Words

1. scherzo [6]2. adagio3. segue4. zucchini [7]5. capricious6. archipelago7. charlatan8. maraschino9. paparazzo [8]10. fantoccini11. mozzarella12. garibaldi13. ocarina14. prosciutto15. trattoria16. vivace17. cappelletti18. pizzicato19. intaglio

Spelling Tips1. 1 Long e (\ē\) at the end of a word from Italian is usually spelled with i as

in confetti, graffiti, zucchini,fantoccini, cappelletti, and many other words on the list. In Italian, a final i usually indicates a plural form. This is not always true, however, of Italian words in English.

2. 2 Long o (\ō\) at the end of an Italian word is spelled with o as in incognito, stucco, virtuoso, concerto,prosciutto, pizzicato, vibrato and many other words on the list.

3. 3 A long e sound (\ē\) at the end of a word from Italian can be spelled with e as in provolone, finale, and one pronunciation of vivace, although this spelling of the sound is less common than i.

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4. 4 The \sh\ sound has various spellings in words from Italian; a spelling it usually doesn't have is sh! It can be spelled sc as in crescendo and prosciutto or ch as in charlatan and pistachio. The spelling of the \sh\ sound in capricious is also seen in words that come from Latin—the ancestral language of Italian.

5. 5 The \k\ sound can be spelled cc when it comes before long o (\ō\) as in stucco or when it comes before \ä\ as in staccato.

6. 6 Another Italian spelling of \k\ is ch as in scherzo.7. 7 The sound \ē-nē\, common at the end of Italian words (it forms

diminutives), is usually spelled ini (as inzucchini and fantoccini).8. 8 The double consonant zz is typically pronounced \ts\ in words from Italian,

as in paparazzo, mozzarella,pizzicato, and one pronunciation of piazza.

Words from SpanishPrint this page

Study Words1. burrito2. embargo [1]3. chimichanga4. gazpacho5. mariachi [2]6. sombrero7. alligator8. canasta9. bonanza10. chinchilla11. machismo12. enchilada13. pueblo14. hacienda15. fandango16. quesadilla [3]17. flotilla18. tornado19. flamenco [4]20. vigilante21. adios22. cabana23. gordita24. peccadillo25. filibuster

26. tortilla27. vanilla28. cilantro29. fiesta30. anchovy31. mesa [5]32. ramada33. junco34. cafeteria35. bongo36. castanets37. mantilla [6]38. oregano39. lariat40. chalupa41. buffalo [7]42. renegade43. langosta44. alamo45. barrio46. cedilla47. Argentine48. bolivar49. amarillo50. cordovan

51. desperado52. empanada53. tomatillo54. diablo55. pochismo56. sierra57. olio58. bolero59. junta60. duenna

Challenge Words

1. sassafras2. punctilio3. sarsaparilla4. comandante5. embarcadero6. rejoneador7. novillero8. picaresque9. conquistador10. rasgado11. vaquero12. caballero

Spelling Tips1. 1 A long o sound (\ō\) at the end of a word is often a mark of Spanish origin,

and it is nearly always spelled simply with o as in embargo and many other words on this list.

Page 16: spelling

2. 2 A long e sound (\ē\) at the end of a word of Spanish origin is usually spelled with i as in mariachi.

3. 3 The \k\ sound is sometimes spelled with qu in words of Spanish origin. This is especially true when the vowel sound that follows is long a (\ā\), long e (\ē\), or short i (\i\). Quesadilla and conquistador (in its pronunciations with and without the \s\ sound) are examples from our list.

4. 4 It is much more common for the \k\ sound to be spelled with c in words of Spanish origin. This is almost invariable when the vowel sound that follows is a schwa \ə\ as in canasta and embarcadero; short a (\a\) as in castanets and caballero; or long o (\ō\) as in flamenco and flamenco and junco.

5. 5 A schwa at the end of a word from Spanish is very common and is usually spelled with a as in mesa,bonanza, and several other words on the list.

6. 6 The combination ll in Spanish words is traditionally treated as a single letter and is pronounced as consonant \y\ in American Spanish. When such words enter English, sometimes that sound persists. At other times it is pronounced just like ll would be in an English word: that is, as \l\. Some words—such asmantilla, tomatillo, amarillo, and caballero—even have two pronunciations in English. Quesadilla, tortilla, and novillero always have the \y\ pronunciation in English; chinchilla, flotilla, vanilla, peccadillo, cedilla, and sarsaparilla always have the \l\ pronunciation. Be on the lookout!

7. 7 Note that, except for ll, double consonants in words from Spanish are not very common. Buffalo and peccadillo represent exceptions. In Spanish, buffalo has only one f and peccadillo has only one c. English spelling rules prefer two consonants as a signal that the previous vowel is short, as is the case in these words.

WORD

gladiolus

cerise

luxuriance

albumen

asceticism

fracas

foulard

knack

torsion

deteriorating

intelligible

interning

promiscu

ous

sanitarium

canonical

therapy

initials

sacrilegious

semaphore

chlorophyll

psychiatry

dulcimer

meticulosity

insoucia

Page 17: spelling

nt

vignette

soubrette

transept

crustaceology

condominium

schappe

syllepsis

catamaran

eudaemonic

smaragdine

esquamulose

equipage

sycophant

eczema

ratoon

Chihuahua

abalone

interlocutory

croissant

shalloon

macerate

vouchsafe

hydrophyte

incisor

narcolepsy

cambist

deification

maculature

elucubra

te

sarcophagus

psoriasis

Purim

luge

milieu

odontalgia

staphylococci

elegiacal

spoliator

fibranne

antipyretic

lyceum

kamikaze

antediluvian

xanthosi

s

vivisepulture

euonym

chiaroscurist

logorrhea

demarche

succedaneum

prospicience

pococurante

autochthonous

appoggiatura

Ursprache

Page 18: spelling

serrefine

guerdon

Laodicean

stromuhr

cymotrichous

guetapens