Orthography challenge
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 22 answers to crossword clue "Orthography challenge"
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AnswerCrossword Clue
BEEOrthography challenge
SPELLINGOrthography.
BEEOrthography contest
BEEOrthography meet
OPQROrthography quartet
SPELLINGBEEOrthography experts' newspaper?
MODSPPresent-day orthography: Abbr.
CHAUCERANDBURNSTwo poets whose orthography is unusual
cacographybad handwriting (the antithesis of calligraphy) or orthography
cacographiesCACOGRAPHY, bad handwriting (the antithesis of calligraphy) or orthography
hamzahthe sign for a glottal stop in Arabic orthography usually represented in English by an apostrophe
orthographicrelating to orthography, the part of language study that deals with letters and spelling also ORTHOGRAPHICAL
orthographicalrelating to orthography, the part of language study that deals with letters and spelling also ORTHOGRAPHIC
naturalisesAlter (an adopted foreign word) so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language
naturalisingAlter (an adopted foreign word) so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language
naturalizeAlter (an adopted foreign word) so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language
naturalizesAlter (an adopted foreign word) so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language
naturalizedAlter (an adopted foreign word) so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language
naturalizingAlter (an adopted foreign word) so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language
naturalisedAlter (an adopted foreign word) so that it conforms more closely to the phonology or orthography of the adopting language
orthographiesORTHOGRAPHY, the branch of knowledge concerned with the study of spelling and representing sounds of a language by letters and diacritics
koppasa consonantal letter in the Greek alphabet pronounced like kappa (K) with the point of articulation further back in the throat. It became obsolete in classical (Attic) Greek orthography, but was passed on to the Romans who incorporated it into their alphabet as Q