One should use "ea" in English spelling when the sound is like the "ee" in "see" or "tea." Use "ee" when the sound is like the "ee" in "bee" or "tree."
One should use "ee" in spelling when the sound is a long "e" as in "bee" or "see." One should use "ea" in spelling when the sound is a long "e" as in "beach" or "teach."
There are differences in British and American English spelling. The word in question is, in the UK spelled "licence" and in America is spelled "license"
The spelling recognize is correct in the US. The preferred UK spelling is recognise.This is only one of many -ize/-ise distinctions between British and American English. Others are specialize, realize, and organize.(see the related link)
The first is the British spelling; the second is the American spelling.
The correct spelling is "analyzed." It is spelled with one 'l' in the middle.
There is only one common spelling of the surname "English."
Well you can, it'd be a spelling error, but you can.
One hundred thousand.
1,000,000 = one million
No. At least there is only one standard spelling English spelling of "initial".
One should use "ee" in spelling when the sound is a long "e" as in "bee" or "see." One should use "ea" in spelling when the sound is a long "e" as in "beach" or "teach."
The spelling of English words was decided by certain individuals over the years including Geoffrey Chaucer in the fourteenth century and Dr Johnson in the eighteenth.
No. Spelling would be one part of English, or another language, but English is much more than spelling. There are all the grammar aspects and then there are things like poetry and plays and books and writing essays and many other things.
The spelling of "enrol" with one "l" is a common variant used in British English. In American English, the spelling "enroll" with double "l" is more commonly used.
It doesn't have one; it's an English surname.
Either one is technically correct. License is the American spelling. Licence is the English spelling.
You have it right because it's one spelling of the word. The other spelling is omelette, from the French. This is one of those "opinion" spellings.