Academic Writing Spelling

Academic Writing

Spelling

When writing English for academic purposes it is important to spell accurately. It is, however, very difficult to produce language which is intelligent, appropriate and correctly spelled at the same time. It is therefore important, after you have finished writing to carefully read your work and correct your mistakes. This is proofreading.

There are several different kinds of mistakes that might appear to be spelling mistakes.

  1. Words spelled incorrectly.
  2. Spelling of words pronounced the same.
  3. Word confusion.
Example Correction
1

He left imediately
The animals are agresive.

He left immediately.
The animals are aggressive.

2

The students went to there class.
She has brown hare.
Wear is the library?

The students went to their class.
She has brown hair.
Where is the library?

3

The library is a quite place to work.
A pesonnnel computer is useful.
Shanghai is bigger then London.
I finished at least.

The library is a quiet place to work.
A personal computer is useful.
Shanghai is bigger than London.
I finished at last.

Exercise

Try this exercise.

For more information and exercises on spelling, click Writing Spelling Introduction

!!Be careful with computer spell-checkers. They do not know which word you intended to write and if you mistakenly mis-spell a word which exists in English, the computer will knot notice it:

I have a spelling checker
It came with my PC
It plainly marks four my revue
Mistakes I cannot sea
I’ve run this poem threw it
I’m sure your please to no
It’s letter perfect in it’s weigh
My checker tolled me sew

Also if you make a spelling mistake, the computer spell-checker might correct it wrongly – as it does not know which word you indended to type.

Three examples from my students are:

Firstly, …
Secondly, …
Thirdly, ..
Frothily, ..
.

And the accounting student who wrote about “earrings per share“,

or the business research methods student who kept writing about the “null hypnosis“.

Exercise

Try this exercise, or this different version of the same exercise..

References