February 26, 2005, 16:59
<wordnerd>"learnt; spelt"
Richard said, "
I learnt to dance at school."
Do Brits generally use the forms
learnt, spelt, etc., rather than
learned, spelled, etc.?
What's the genesis of those forms?
February 27, 2005, 07:27
jheemI'd say that they are modern spellings of words that show that the suffix for the preterite in English is in some environments devoiced. When the
e in the suffix was still being pronounced, the
d remained voiced, but later when the schwa was dropped, the
d became a
t.
learnèd >
learn'd >
learnt.
We don't usually do something like this. Compare the final
s in the standard English plural. It isn't respelled in words which end in a voiced consonant to a
z.
week ~
weeksdog ~ *
dogz(and while we're at it)
church ~ *
churchiz.
Just another example of our arbitrary orthography at work.