By the same token, fetor (rather than foetor) is our term of choice (e.g. Therefore in line with modern usage, we use 'fetus', and by extension derived terms are also consistent with this, e.g. In both British and American English 'fetus' is the preferred term (and etymologically the correct one) and foetus will only now be seen in the historical literature and out-of-date textbooks. One can debate which spelling should prevail, but we feel that "echoes" leaves less room for mispronunciation of the long O sound and therefore prefer the plural form "echoes" to be used (by extension haloes, the plural of halo, is preferred to halos). Although neither of them is specifically linked to UK or US English spelling and both are technically correct, at we aim for uniformity as much as possible. echoes vs echosīoth "echoes" and "echos" are correct plural forms of "echo". Although one may favor either spelling, for these reasons and because we adhere to consistency the sole spelling employed on is "artifact". Therefore, some would argue that artifact should be the preferred spelling - it has an American and British following, and a spelling that is closer to related words. Artifact also has a derivative spelling that is closer to words that are related to it, e.g. Interestingly, unlike most American spellings, artifact is the accepted form in some British publications. Artifact is the American English spelling. NB: ' vs' is short for versus artifact vs artefactĪrtefact is the original British English spelling. This is separate to the differences between British (UK) and American (US) spelling and the site now automatically attempts to show users the correct spelling, based on your browser language setting, unless overridden by your chosen language preference in your user profile settings. ![]() The term orthography is the formal term for the system of spelling for any language. This may be the result of an international consensus on correct spelling, other times it is a local decision about how we can improve consistency on the site. There are a number of words we never use at.
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