It is fairly recently I was working near a place called Loughborough. Where the first ough is "uff" and the second is "uh" (the whole thing being "luff-buh-ruh"). Which even as a native English speaker I think is cheating.SckizoBoy said:I think what OP believes to be 'special' about English and it's rather haphazard relationship with phonetic spelling (or rather, a lack thereof), is the somewhat free and loose 'rules' that are drawn from historic standards developed and agreed upon at different points in time by different groups of people with little (read: no) effort by central government to integrate or standardise anything ('correct' spelling in English, with very few exceptions, came about thanks to consensus, not by rule, and while this is true for many languages, the blurred lines of English's linguistic heritage make said consensus an exercise in madness). Which causes crap like: tough; though; thought; and through, all of which draw the 'ough' letter cluster from largely different etymological roots.
I don't think Spelling Bees are really as much a thing in the UK as they are in the US. I'm sure they happen but they never seem to be the big "all the school comes to watch" things that the yanks have