Over the past few years, I've been typing quite a bit in the English language. Of course, being Dutch, I use a spelling corrector to aid me a bit. Yet some of the things I have learned to be correct, show up as errors on the damned thing! With the spelling corrector defaulting to US, correcting it usually results in a far less pretty word, at least in my humble opinion. I rather change it to UK English, where the imaginative voice in my mind reads the sentence out loud in a pretty accent.
To illustrate, if you have for example Microsoft Office Word, with spelling correction, set the spelling to English (U.K.), and copy the following list:
sulphur ? sulfur
aeroplane ? airplane
favourable ? favorable
anaesthesia ? anesthesia
liquorice ? licorice
cheque ? check
analyse ? analyze
arse ? ass
I'll wait
...
..
.
Now, set the spelling to English (U.S.).
Are you as disappointed as I am by the (subjective) loss of elegance of some of these words in the US? Or do you rejoice in the use of this somewhat simplified spelling? These are just a few examples, and I know that there are examples too where it's the other way around. But it's always a let down for me when I encounter those red lines below a perfectly acceptable, and in my opinion, superior spelling of a word.
To illustrate, if you have for example Microsoft Office Word, with spelling correction, set the spelling to English (U.K.), and copy the following list:
sulphur ? sulfur
aeroplane ? airplane
favourable ? favorable
anaesthesia ? anesthesia
liquorice ? licorice
cheque ? check
analyse ? analyze
arse ? ass
I'll wait
...
..
.
Now, set the spelling to English (U.S.).
Are you as disappointed as I am by the (subjective) loss of elegance of some of these words in the US? Or do you rejoice in the use of this somewhat simplified spelling? These are just a few examples, and I know that there are examples too where it's the other way around. But it's always a let down for me when I encounter those red lines below a perfectly acceptable, and in my opinion, superior spelling of a word.