Colonel comes from Old Italian colonello, commander of a column of troops, which in turn derives from colonna,column. English usage followed Spanish practice (also a French variant) and spelled the word "coronel," pronounced the way it looks. Eventually this was corrupted to ker-nel. When the written version became "colonel" (reflecting its Latin origin), the "kernel" pronunciation remained.
The word "colonel" comes from the Italian word "colonello," which was derived from the Latin word "columnellus," meaning "little column." The pronunciation changed over time, but the spelling remained the same.
The word comes from Latin, so somewhere the pronunciation has changed separately from the spelling. --- Colonel comes from Old Italian colonello, commander of a column of troops, which in turn derives from colonna, column. Originally, English followed the Spanish practice and spelled the word "coronel," pronounced the way it looks. Eventually this was corrupted to ker-nel. Then a decision was made that coronel ought to be spelled "colonel" to better reflect its Italian origin, but the "kernel" pronunciation remained.
The English language has many irregularities in spelling due to its complex history. The word "phonics" comes from the Greek word "phōnē," meaning sound, but its spelling was likely influenced by other factors such as etymology or historical usage.
The homophone of "colonel" is "kernel." Both words are pronounced the same way but have different meanings.
So why is it spelled with an e? It is because it spells the way it is!
The word "colonel" comes from the Italian word "colonello," which was derived from the Latin word "columnellus," meaning "little column." The pronunciation changed over time, but the spelling remained the same.
you spelled invisability wrong and there isnt a way, its just a glitch. Really, the answer is by luck.
Because that's just the way it sounds.
When words are spelled the way they sound (e.g., slush, croak, sizzle) it is called onomatopoeia.
i don't know. i HATE words like that!!! it should be spelled fonics or something like that. lol
It's the same city. One is spelled the Western way (Pusan) and one is spelled the way it sounds in Korean (Busan).
A phonetically spelled word is when you spell it the way it sounds. For example, "through" would be "thru". A correctly spelled word is when it is spelled as it is found in the dictionary.
The way to properly spell "phycic" is psychic. This is one of those words that is difficult to sound out, and it is not spelled the way it sounds so it is often spelled incorrectly.
"Umm, I'm not sure, but I think this way." ("umm" is a non-standard English word related to onomatopoeia [spelled out sounds].)
It is spelt Oh because the way the o sounds. Plus there is no other way to spell it.
how you spelled it is just how it sounds, though the how you spelled it likely means prefix, like the de- in defuse or degrade. the way it is spelled is prix (price) fixe (fixed)
The word comes from Latin, so somewhere the pronunciation has changed separately from the spelling. --- Colonel comes from Old Italian colonello, commander of a column of troops, which in turn derives from colonna, column. Originally, English followed the Spanish practice and spelled the word "coronel," pronounced the way it looks. Eventually this was corrupted to ker-nel. Then a decision was made that coronel ought to be spelled "colonel" to better reflect its Italian origin, but the "kernel" pronunciation remained.