I just realised how Business is spelled....after 20 years of speaking English

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Bad spellers, bad spellers everywhere.

I'm not sure if people are serious or joking about their bad spelling skills but I'm getting a sick feeling that it's contagious. Seeing all of the mistakes makes me afraid that I too will spell them wrong in the future.

Bailing out of this thread now before I get infected.
 
on a semi-related note, i knew how to spell these words but i was completely wrong as to their pronunciation for many years:

viscount - pronounced - vye-count, silent s
respite - doesn't rhyme with "despite", instead - res-bit

I knew viscount, but I always pronounced respite like "despite." I learn something new from GAF everyday o_o
 
I remember having this problem when I was younger, OP.

Granted, it was grade school, but I was a smart kid so you shouldn't feel ashamed.

I also used to spell especially "expecially". Every damn time!
 
My spelling is one of my best qualities(except when typing on a phone, damn auto correct!)

business. does it mean busy-ness? full of busy?

http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=business

Old English bisignes (Northumbrian) "care, anxiety, occupation," from bisig "careful, anxious, busy, occupied, diligent" (see busy (adj.)) + -ness. Middle English sense of "state of being much occupied or engaged" (mid-14c.) is obsolete, replaced by busyness.

Sense of "a person's work, occupation" is first recorded late 14c. (in late Old English bisig (adj.) appears as a noun with the sense "occupation, state of employment"). Meaning "what one is about at the moment" is from 1590s. Sense of "trade, commercial engagements" is first attested 1727. In 17c. it also could mean "sexual intercourse." Modern two-syllable pronunciation is 17c.

Business card first attested 1840; business letter from 1766. Business end "the practical or effective part" (of something) is American English, by 1874. Phrase business as usual attested from 1865. To mean business "be intent on serious action" is from 1856. To mind (one's) own business is from 1620s. Johnson's dictionary also has busiless "At leisure; without business; unemployed."

Kind of, yeah. I think. If the link is accurate.
 
Tongue. I can never fucking get it right for some reason.

You say it "Aluminum" but it's spelled "Aluminium" :p

That always bothered me.

No it is NOT. Aluminium is a secret plot by the Queen to get America back. Spell it right, spell it Aluminum. Long live the Republic!
 
I went many years being happy writing the word

akward.

I don't know how. I'm not one of those monkeys that says 'this game is really addicting' all the time. I thought I was literate.

definitely

this one gives me brain trouble as well. I've been known to just say fuck it and demand the spell checker to fix it. I once got so pissed off with it that, knowing I wasn't going to succeed at getting it right that day I wrote

definitily

and just let the spell checker do its thing. It really felt like the most lazy thing I have ever done. I knew there was an e in there, but just couldn't be fucked.
It's pretty early here and I'm very hungover I shouldn't be admitting any of this.
 
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