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, ,or a single unless they are distinctly foreign, as in raj, Iraq, guru, fez, or slang, as in spiv, baz . True as this may be, it is hardly quotable as a reference rule. Graphotactic rules may have explanatory value in laying bare some of the general design principles. There is the so-called ‘short word rule’, which provides a minimum bulk of three letters for lexical
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Page 55 words as opposed to function words (p. 76). The rules for <e>-marking of long vowels and-doubling as a marking of short vowels have graphotactic complications. They depend on whether the vowel in question is spelt by one or more letters: we have but not * , but not * (p. 18). Let us return to our search for other quotable reference rules. One rule you are likely to be offered is (2). It reminds you that the plural of army, penny, sky, is armies, pennies, skies, not *<armys>, etc. and that you have the verb form envies, marries, relies, not *<envys>, etc. Here, too, you have to be careful of the wording of the rule. The <-y> should not be part of a complex spelling , , <ey>, as in employs, relays, obeys, not *<emploies>, etc. The added <s> should not be the possessive, as in Tommy’s, anybody’s . The apostrophe shows that these are not plural forms. The letter <-y> is generally used as a word-final variant of the letter . If you add a suffix to a word ending in <-y>, the <-y> usually ‘changes’ to , as in: contrariwise defiant dutiful fanciful happiness hardihood kindliness livelihood merrily merriment penniless pitiless reliance wearily wearisome The change applies before <-ed>, as in defied, pitied, but not before <-ing>: defying, pitying, since a sequence of two s is usually avoided. This is so in babyish, essayist, lobbyist, rowdyism, toryism . Word-final <-i> is rare: ski, taxi . For these we find skiing, and either taxiing or taxying, taxis or taxies, but for obvious reasons *<skying> is ruled out. Adaptation rules Rule (2) is an example of an ADAPTATION RULE which alters the spelling of a morpheme when it becomes part of a complex word. Other such rules are: • ‘ full is spelt <-ful> as a suffix, as in fretful, spoonful.’ • ‘ all is spelt as a prefix, as in always, altogether.’ • ‘One letter of a complex spelling is elided when the same letter follows at a morpheme boundary’, giving threshold not <shh->, eighth not <-tth>. You may not notice this in words like fully, which looks like +<-y> (cf. smelly ) rather than the adverbial +<-ly>. ‘SYLLABIFICATION’ RULES Most printed text is ‘justified’: all the lines on a page, or in a column, end in exactly the same place. The edge of the print presents a straight vertical line. Justifying is done wherever possible by juggling with slightly wider or slightly smaller spaces at the word boundaries, so that the line of print expands or contracts to end with a complete word. Sometimes this cannot be done neatly and a word has to be split over two lines, using a hyphen. The wider the page or column, the less need there will be for word division, so the best place to
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Page 56 study this practice under pressure is in text with a narrow-column layout, as in newspapers. EXERCISE 11.2 Suppose you were printing a text and your line of type could not take a whole word at the end. Where would you split the word in the following cases? accepted athlete baker bundle danger defensive dictation eventually festive frisky knickers lastly latest laundry mangey newspaper notable planting problem product quarter rational saleable shredded singeing solid spaghetti stadium veteran whitish Discussion You will aim to leave at the end of the line part of a word that is pronounceable as one or more syllables, hence the guidelines followed by typesetters are sometimes called ‘syllabification’ rules. Though you will often find inconsistencies, the usual practice seems to be as follows. (a) A single consonant letter after a short vowel usually goes before the break, as in <sol-id>,, and after the break if the vowel is long: <sta-dium>, <no-table>. (b) Whenever possible, consonant letter clusters are split evenly: , <defen-sive>, , <prob-lem>, , including doublets such as , even though the <-gg-> stands for only one phoneme /g/. (c) Complex letter correspondences such as