Advertisement
Advertisement
orthography
[ awr-thog-ruh-fee ]
noun
- the art of writing words with the proper letters, according to accepted usage; correct spelling.
- the part of language study concerned with letters and spelling.
- a method of spelling, as by the use of an alphabet or other system of symbols; spelling.
- a system of such symbols:
Missionaries provided the first orthography for the language.
- an orthographic projection, or an elevation drawn by means of it.
orthography
/ É”Ëˈθɒɡ°ùÉ™´Úɪ /
noun
- a writing system
- spelling considered to be correct
- the principles underlying spelling
- the study of spelling
- orthographic projection
Derived Forms
- ´Ç°ùˈ³Ù³ó´Ç²µ°ù²¹±è³ó±ð°ù, noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of orthography1
Example Sentences
He asked for all the word’s information — its definition, part of speech, orthography, use in a sentence — but he didn’t need it, evidenced by a slight smile as he spoke.
The Post’s attention to orthography has reached a new low: two mistakes in two words.
“Many of the writers didn’t know standard Yiddish orthography, so they just wrote the words the way they heard them,†she explained.
Marden had become interested in Asian orthography in 1984, when he visited an exhibition, “Masters of Japanese Calligraphy: 8th-19th Century,†at the Japan House and at the Asia Society, in New York.
Many languages die because, like Haida, they are passed from generation to generation orally and do not have an orthography to preserve them.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse