You don't. That is the correct spelling.
Someone speaking differently has a accent.
The spelling is "exception" (an instance treated or handled differently).
The proper noun is "Britain", referring generally to Great Britain or to historical England.
Yes kerb is how you spell curb in British English, and curb is how you spell kerb in American English.
As far as I am aware there is only one way to spell Imogen. On computers it will come out as Imogene but that is pronounced differently.
Add E before R to correctly spell differently, meaning in another way or form.
timbuktu is spelled differently because the people in Mali there spell it differently and pronounce it in a diverse way.
yes you can: Shanon Shannen
The Greek spelling is Νηρευς
Someone speaking differently has a accent.
Yes they do they spell it and say it differently Spelling : Lietuva
If you are asking how to spell "Britain" (the country) then you spell it as I just wrote it.On a lighter note:Britin is spelled:B as in Britain.r as in Rascal.i as in Intense.t as in Theodore.i as in Intense yet again.n as in NormandieThat is how you spell "Britin".
well it is very simple you spell it Britain
In Britain "flower" is still spelt "flower".
When you spell it in hmong its "aw" but it is said differently
jablko ( "j" is pronounced differently; as "yablko")
The spelling is "exception" (an instance treated or handled differently).