Notable is the correct spelling.
The word "special" applies to something unique, notable, or extraordinary.Special.
That is the usual spelling of the female given name Kathleen (Irish, from Katherine).The notable variants are Cathleen, Kathlyn, Kathlynn, and Kaitlyn.
The word sought may be:weird - odd, strangeweed - an unwanted plant (slang, marijuana)wide - having notable breadth or width
The correct spelling is "memoriam" as in the phrase from Latin "in memoriam" (in memory of).
That is the correct spelling of the slang term helluva("hell-of-a"), meaning a notable, extraordinary, or extreme thing or event.ExamplesIt was a helluva winter.That was a helluva golf shot.
The correct spelling of the adjective is famous (known, notable).
This is likely the noun adventure (a notable exploit, undertaking, or experience).
The likely word is quotation (a notable quote),also used for the punctuation "quotation marks" (" ").
The spelling is "significant" (notable, or having some bearing).
The notable person with that given name was Haitham al-Yemeni, an Al-Qaeda member.
The word "special" applies to something unique, notable, or extraordinary.Special.
That is the usual spelling of the female given name Kathleen (Irish, from Katherine).The notable variants are Cathleen, Kathlyn, Kathlynn, and Kaitlyn.
The word sought may be:weird - odd, strangeweed - an unwanted plant (slang, marijuana)wide - having notable breadth or width
The correct spelling of the proper noun is Raxacoricofallapatorius.This is a fictional planet from the SF series "Doctor Who" and is notable for having its name misspelled as Rexicoricusphallivatorius on DVD subtitles.
The correct spelling is "memoriam" as in the phrase from Latin "in memoriam" (in memory of).
That is the correct spelling of the slang term helluva("hell-of-a"), meaning a notable, extraordinary, or extreme thing or event.ExamplesIt was a helluva winter.That was a helluva golf shot.
The name for the kings of Babylonia is spelled "Nebuchadnezzar" (with a silent D). The most notable is Nebuchadnezzar II who is credited with building the "hanging gardens" around 600 BC.