I seen it spelt wrongly lots of times but ........

Is it the salty, time-worn, sailing version of YOGHURT? In the same way 'fore castle' became fo'c'stle...

...shouting down to SWMBO in a gale, the skipper was heard to truncate his breakfast request..."pass me a strawberry yaght, lovey". :)
 
Is it the salty, time-worn, sailing version of YOGHURT? In the same way 'fore castle' became fo'c'stle...

...shouting down to SWMBO in a gale, the skipper was heard to truncate his breakfast request..."pass me a strawberry yaght, lovey". :)

Not sure there's anything salty-sailory about a strawberry yoghurt however you spell it :)

More than "yacht", it's the way people tend to mangle "sikaflex" that gets me.

Pete
 
I've been spared that one. How do they get it wrong? Lemme guess...silk-a-flex? Bloomin' illy-trits...:rolleyes:

Getting "silk" in there is quite common, yes, but they usually manage to get other bits wrong as well. Obviously I'm too well-mannered to comment except in a spelling pedantry thread like this one :)

My Dad invariably says it as "silk-a-set", I don't know why.

Pete
 
Nobody else has risen to the temptation so I will. I was always taught that spelt is a type of grain and spelled is the past participle of the verb to spell. Reinforced by the pronunciation which for me always has a D at the end of the word.

Dont bother quoting the dictionaries back at me - these days they follow fashion. They are quite capable of accepting yot rather than yacht.

What were you taught in school about the spelling of to spell.?
 
Nobody else has risen to the temptation so I will. I was always taught that spelt is a type of grain and spelled is the past participle of the verb to spell. Reinforced by the pronunciation which for me always has a D at the end of the word.

Dont bother quoting the dictionaries back at me - these days they follow fashion. They are quite capable of accepting yot rather than yacht.

What were you taught in school about the spelling of to spell.?

To be perfectly honest, I knew it was wrong as soon as I posted.... akin to learnt instead of learned.
 
Nobody else has risen to the temptation so I will. I was always taught that spelt is a type of grain and spelled is the past participle of the verb to spell. Reinforced by the pronunciation which for me always has a D at the end of the word.

Dont bother quoting the dictionaries back at me - these days they follow fashion. They are quite capable of accepting yot rather than yacht.

What were you taught in school about the spelling of to spell.?

In my 1949 revised 3rd edition ( 1941) Little Oxford Dictionary, which was the one I had at school both 'spelt" and "spelled" are given as past tense and past participle of the verb to spell so I gues either would have been accepted as correct even in those far off days!

To be perfectly honest, I knew it was wrong as soon as I posted.... akin to learnt instead of learned.
Learnt and learned likewise alternatives
 
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Good gracious! Frot? Go carefully, now. Look up "frottage" before you continue. Not a word you hear every day, and possibly just as well...:D

I didn't need to look it up to know it was rude, even if innocent of precise meaning. Bit like a double entendre which is only noticed by people who know too much!

Mike.
 
In my 1949 revised 3rd edition ( 1941) Little Oxford Dictionary, which was the one I had at school both 'spelt" and "spelled" are given as past tense and past participle of the verb to spell so I gues either would have been accepted as correct even in those far off days!


Learnt and learned likewise alternatives
Yep. The Hosun Biggs is knackered on that one.
 
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