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・ Cut off period
・ Cut off saw
・ Cut Off Time
・ Cut Off Your Hands
・ Cut Off, Louisiana
・ Cut Out + Keep
・ Cut Out and Keep (album)
・ Cut Out Shapes
・ Cut Out Shapes (band)
・ Cut River
・ Cut River Bridge
・ Cut rule
・ Cut shot
・ Cut Snake
・ Cut Some Rug/Castle Rock
Cut Spelling
・ Cut square (philately)
・ Cut steel jewellery
・ Cut Tari
・ Cut the Cake
・ Cut the Cake (album)
・ Cut the Cake (horse)
・ Cut the Cord
・ Cut the Crap
・ Cut the Crap (Jackyl album)
・ Cut the Kid
・ Cut the Rope
・ Cut the World
・ Cut throat competition
・ Cut Throat Island Air Station


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Cut Spelling : ウィキペディア英語版
Cut Spelling

Cut Spelling is a system of English-language spelling reform which reduces redundant letters and makes substitutions to improve correspondence with the spoken word. It was designed by Christopher Upward and was for a time being popularized by the Simplified Spelling Society. The resulting words are 8–15% shorter than standard spellings. The name ''Cut Spelling'' was coined by psychologist Valerie Yule.〔(About.com )〕
Unlike some other proposed reforms, Cut Spelling does not attempt to make English spelling phonemic, but merely attempts to remove many of the unneeded difficulties of the current spelling. Cut Spelling differs from "traditional orthography" mainly in removing letters from words and makes relatively few substitutions of letters compared with other proposed reforms. According to its designers, this allows readers accustomed to traditional orthography to get used to Cut Spelling fairly quickly and easily, while still giving learners of the language a much-simplified and more systematic spelling system.
==Rules==
Cut Spelling uses three main substitution rules to transform traditional spellings into cut spellings:
# Letters irrelevant to pronunciation. This rule deletes most silent letters, except when these letters (such as "magic e") help indicate pronunciation. Omitting or including the wrong silent letters are common errors. Examples: ''peace'' → ''pece'', ''except'' → ''exept'', ''plaque'' → ''plaq'', ''blood'' → ''blod'', ''pitch'' → ''pich''.
# Cutting unstressed vowels. English unstressed syllables are usually pronounced with the vowel schwa , which has no standard spelling, but can be represented by any vowel letter. Writing the wrong letter in these syllables is a common error, for example, ' for ''separate''. Cut Spelling eliminates these vowel letters completely before approximants ( and ) and nasals (, , and ). In addition, some vowel letters are dropped in suffixes, reducing the confusion between ''-able'' and ''-ible''. Examples: ''symbol'' → ''symbl'', ''victim'' → ''victm'', ''lemon'' → ''lemn'', ''glamour/glamor'' → ''glamr'', ''permanent'' → ''permnnt'', ''waited'' → ''waitd'', ''churches'' → ''churchs'', ''warmest'' → ''warmst'', ''edible'' → ''edbl''.
# Simplifying doubled consonants. This rule helps with another of the most common spelling errors: failing to double letters (''accommodate'' and ''committee'' are often misspelled) or introducing erroneously doubled letters. Cut Spelling does not eliminate all doubled letters: in some words (especially two-syllable words) the doubled consonant letter is needed to differentiate from another differently pronounced word (e.g., ''holly'' and ''holy''). Examples: ''innate'' → ''inate'', ''spell'' → ''spel''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Cut Spelling」の詳細全文を読む



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