English Spelling Reform

The difficult path to simpler spelling

Allow me to open a very large can of worms. English spelling, as virtually
everyone will admit, is absurdly complicated—and much more so than that of
most other modern languages. While this situation may be good for editors
and those who make dictionaries and spelling checkers, it’s bad for nearly
everyone else. People learning English—whether as a first language or later
in life—struggle to memorize innumerable exceptions to an already long list
of spelling rules. But those of us who have known the language all our lives
also struggle constantly to write it correctly, lest we embarrass ourselves
or betray a lack of attention to detail. Why do we all endure such pain? It
seems pointless. And so, as many language authorities have proposed over a
period of more than 200 years, why not simply fix it? Why not simplify
English spelling so that it looks the way it sounds, and make the entire
problem go away? Spelling reform has occurred in other languages, with
dramatic results in improved literacy rates and easier communication for
everyone. Isn’t it about time we did the same thing for English?

At first blush, this seems like a no-brainer, a long-overdue exercise—one
that we might as well get out of the way now, because it will only be harder
later on. And yet, beneath the surface of this noble idea lurk
extraordinarily pesky issues. As annoyed as I get when I read misspelled
words, and as sympathetic as I am to the plight of those trying to learn the
language, I find myself very torn over whether I could actually support an
official reform of English spelling.

Wutz Rong With This Pikcher?
The problems with English spelling, of course, are obvious with a moment’s
reflection. We have words with silent letters that serve no apparent
purpose—such as the second l at the end of “pill” or the gh in the word
“eight.” We have letters or groups of letters that are pronounced many
different ways (or sometimes not at all). A good example is the letters
“ough,” which are pronounced “oo” in “through,” “ou” in “bough,” “oh” in
“though,” “uf” in “enough,” and so on. We have words with different meanings
that are pronounced the same but spelled differently—think “there,” “their,”
and “they’re,” for example. And there are countless other examples. Such
peculiarities in spelling, for the most part, serve no useful function, and
simply add to the amount of work we all need to do in learning and using the
language. A reformed, simplified spelling system would resolve all these
annoyances and many others.

Indeed, a certain amount of reform has happened all by itself over the
years, as previously alternative spellings have worked their way into the
dictionary as standard forms. Think of the word “catalog,” which was
formerly spelled “catalogue,” or “draft,” formerly spelled “draught.” On a
relatively small scale, sensible spellings do sometimes replace less
sensible ones. However, this process has been hit-and-miss, with more misses
than hits.

The proposal, then, is that we systematically and definitively wipe out all
the anomalous spellings in English so that anyone looking at a word in print
will immediately know how to pronounce it—and, conversely, anyone attempting
to write English will be able to get every single spelling right the first
time. In other words, proponents of English spelling reform want us to adopt
a (mostly) phonetic orthography, perhaps along the lines of what one finds
in Spanish or Indonesian. Needless to say, though, it’s not quite that
simple.

Fasing Douts

The first question that arises is how far such a reform would go. For
instance, we could make a good start by simply removing letters that are
never pronounced. “Though” could become “tho,” “guard” could become “gard,”
“foreign” could become “forin,” “doubt” could become “dout,” and so on. We
could also, perhaps, reduce the number of ways to write any particular
sound—so the “ee” sound in “street,” for example, might always be written
“ee,” never “ea,” “ie,” “ei,” “i,” “e,” or whatever. Although these changes
would help, however, they would solve only a subset of the problems—and the
more extensive the changes are, the more difficult they would be for the
public to accept.

Consider the question of words that are pronounced differently in different
situations. You don’t even have to get into dialectal differences here—think
of a word as common as “the.” If we’re spelling it phonetically, which vowel
do we put on the end? Or do we have two separate spellings—one for when it’s
pronounced “thuh” and another for when it’s pronounced “thee”? In such
cases, some reformers propose adopting a neutral spelling that, while
perhaps not perfectly phonetic, can adapt itself to either pronunciation.
Other reformers say that this is exactly the kind of problem we’re trying to
solve in the first place.

Then there are those who point out that a word’s spelling gives important
clues to its etymology, meaning, and relationship to other words. So even
though the “a” in the word “real” is not pronounced, it serves the important
function of showing the word’s connection to the word “reality,” in which
the “a” is pronounced. Lose that letter, and the words no longer appear to
have anything to do with each other. Thus, at least some of the
peculiarities of English spelling exist for entirely legitimate, and still
useful, historical reasons. Critics of this argument point out that English
also has plenty of words whose spellings were entirely arbitrary—the word
“receive” might just as easily have settled into the lexicon with an “ie”
rather than an “ei,” and we can’t blame such oddities on the words’
derivations from other languages.

Perhaps the most persuasive argument against spelling reform is that
simplified spellings would be—at least initially—much harder for all the
hundreds of millions of English readers to read, since we’ve already
programmed our brains to work under the current, flawed system. There’s also
that little matter of what to do with the billions of books, magazines, Web
sites, and other documents that already use the “old” spelling. The task of
retooling them in a new spelling system is unthinkably huge, but if they
remain in their current state and are expected to be readable, most people
will have to be able to understand how to read both systems—an even larger
cognitive burden than what we already have. Supporters of spelling reform
admit that the transition process is bound to be difficult, but that in a
few hundred years, our descendants will thank us and the world will be a
happier place.

I have no doubt that this is true. But if English were spelled the way it
sounds, I’d no longer be able to make snap judgments about people’s
intelligence by observing their spelling skills. That may be too high a
price to pay. —Joe Kissell

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