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Dear WW: ;my dictionary says "orthography" means spelling correctly. So an "orthographologist" ought be a person who spells correctly.
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Or an orthographist?
Spelling Bee becomes Orthographology Bee.
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And a calligrapher is hard to find.
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dear Bill: I wouldn't think that it would be too difficult for a adept speller. the gn beginning is fairly predictable in a bee, and the rest of the word is easy. this coming from someone who in haste(in the 8th grade) spelled "graduate" garduate, and has never lived it down amongst my family... it was my first word, and though disqualified, I easily spelled the rest of the words in the bee. I was destroyed.
formerly known as etaoin...
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and not forget, gnomes, small dwarflike creatures, who know the earth's treasures are stored, and gnomon!
on a sundial, "gnomon knows the troubles i've seen"
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Dear etaoin: unless the kids have access to some kind of collection of words likely to be used, I think it is not the sort of word I would regard as reasonable. I am 85, had to take many science courses to get into medical school, and read a dozen medical journals every week but never heard of "gnotobiotic" before. It is obviously a sort of buzz word familiar only to a rather restricted group of researchers. There must be thousands of words that would have been more appropriate.
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there was an article in the NY TIMES sunday magazine about a month ago, about a family that specialized in training for, and wining spelling bees. the kids focus in on words with silent letters or other spelling anomalies (the kid in the article came in 3rd as i recall, failing on gneiss-- which made me smile, because it was i word i knew at her age (12 or so!) having learned that the bronx is gneiss, and manhattan is schists! (and that last one often was mis-spoken!) the limestone layers, that make up milo's cave in the south, are almost completely eroded away up here.. only small outcropping remain.. (marble hill is one small limestone landmark)
they collect list of words used in other spelling bees, and generally go about learning how to spell obscure words like gnotobotic, to win. many times, they do not know the meaning of the words, just how to spell them. it seemed very sad, and very unlike the joy we take in words.
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Dear of troy: I should think that the spellers would learn the meanings of the words, since it ought to be a valuable mnemonic to help remember spelling, to have learned the roots of the words. I have to recognize prefix, root, and suffix or I'm helpless. Tnat's the way my mother taught me. I would not last long in a spelling bee.
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