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Check Your Spelling Knowledge With This Test

Can you suss out your spelling?

#language #knowledge

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Что вы думаете по этому поводу?
332 Comments
billyboy915
Both "kneed" and "knead" are correct. They have two very different meanings, are spelled differently, but are homophones.
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10.09.2025 10:21
mikeyparry
12/12. Very easy mainly because I can recognise the wrong American spellings!
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18.08.2025 01:41
Steve Kemp
question 6, 8, 9, 11 and 12 all incorrect spellings - should be courgette, chequered, fantasise, immunise and millilitres.
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19.07.2025 07:01
billyboy915
Christopher Skinner, Yes, those are the accepted British spellings, however those exact variants were not available options. Only the American variants were correct.
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12.02.2025 09:26
billyboy915
Keith Williams, The U.S. does not have an official language, but some states designate English as their official language. Scholars acknowledge variations in spelling as acceptable, whether they are British or American. In no case was a correct British variant offered alongside the American spelling. "Chequared", "mililitres", "fantasighs", and "imunise" are incorrect anywhere in the world.
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12.02.2025 09:21
billyboy915
Andrew McFee, Scholars acknowledge variations in spelling as acceptable, whether they are British or American. In no case was a correct British variant offered alongside the American spelling. "Chequared", "mililitres", "fantasighs", and "imunise" are incorrect anywhere in the world.
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12.02.2025 09:17
billyboy915
mikeyparry, Yes, those are the accepted British spellings, however, they were not the spellings offered. "Fantasighs" and "imunise" are not correct anywhere in the world.
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12.02.2025 09:09
billyboy915
Paul Greenslade, The correct option was "checkered", the American spelling. The other option was "chequared" and is wrong anywhere in the world. Only the American version, "checkered", was acceptable. I recognize British spelling without making a big deal of it. Why can't you do the same?
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12.02.2025 09:04
Suzanne Wilson
11/12 I read 'mililitres' as 'millilitres' so chose it as that's how we spell it in Australia. I got some of the others right only because the options of what would have been almost correct in Australia were themselves misspelled eg immunise, chequered. Perhaps future spelling quizzes could be categorised as "American."
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05.11.2024 10:39
Paul Greenslade
And chequered is correct outside the USA.
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17.06.2024 05:13
mikeyparry
12 / 12. However, it is fantasise and immunise on this side of the Atlantic!
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08.06.2024 08:15
Shelley Durocher
Shelley Durocher, Sorry, second option.
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20.04.2024 02:30
Shelley Durocher
Iancompat, Surely they can, and did. It was the only correct answer listed. If you look more carefully, you'll see that the first option misspelled the "mili-" part of the word, which should be "milli-" The only correct option of the 2 given was the U.S. spelling, which does not make it wrong, just different.
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20.04.2024 02:28
Shelley Durocher
Denise Bruce, But the one ending in "-tres" was spelled wrong, with only one "l" in "mili". That's wrong everywhere. The only correct option of the 2 choices was the U.S. spelling, which does not make it wrong, just different.
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20.04.2024 02:26
Shelley Durocher
patricia crosland, Location based variants in spelling are not correct or incorrect, just different.
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20.04.2024 02:24

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