Joyce Brite asks:
> Concerning the spelling of sulfur/sulphur, if sulfur is the American
> spelling and sulphur is the British spelling, then why is the name of
> the small town in Arkansas spelled Sulphur Springs? Perhaps the
> original settlers of the community were British? ;-)
Isn't this one of those reforms suggested by John Dewey (1859-1952),
the Chicago-based lexicographer and philosopher, wherein sensible
changes like "ax", "plow" and "sulfur" were jumbled up with counter-
productive ones like "kidnaping" for "kidnapping" (thus ranking it with
"raping" rather than "rapping"), and which in the end half-took in
America, leaving a lot of useful changes unfinished ?
Dan Wilson, London
[ For several decades the Chicago Tribune changed commonly-used words
[ like "although" to "altho", but this noble effort only incurred the
[ resentment of the readers. The editing practice was quietly
[ abandoned in the 1960s. -- Robbie
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