Learn more about Structured Word Inquiry (SWI) by studying the spellings of some vocabulary words related to the Halloween holiday: Halloween, pumpkin, costume, zombie, cauldron, ghastly, ghost, ghoul, enchant, skeleton, vampire, trick, treat, and candy.
Structured Word Inquiry
English spelling is rule-based. There are no exceptions, just more rules to uncover. I have yet to find a word whose spelling cannot be explained. Structured Word Inquiry (SWI) is a means by which to study spelling. One can use SWI to investigate spelling by asking four questions:
1.) What does a word mean?
2.) How is the word built?
3.) What are morphological and etymological relatives of the word?
4.) What are the sounds that matter? What are the letters doing?
The questions are to be investigated in order.
Halloween Vocabulary
Halloween
1.) Noun: a holiday celebrated on October 31
2.) complex word (a word that contains prefixes and/or suffixes)
Hallow + een -> Halloween
From 1781, also Hallow-e’en, Hallow e’en, a Scottish shortening of Allhallow-even “Eve of All Saints, last night of October”
“Halloween” is a poem written by the Scottish poet Robert Burns in 1785 published in the Kilmarnock Edition in 1786.
Hallow: sacred, saint(ed), from the Old English adjective hālig, meaning “holy”
-een: “end of the day,” from Old English æfen, related to eve
3.)
Hallow + een + s -> Halloweens
Hallow + mas -> Hallowmas
Hallow + s -> hallows
Hallow + ed -> hallowed
4.) The <ll> and <ee> are digraphs, or two letters that spell one sound.
Pumpkin
1.) Noun: a large rounded orange-yellow fruit with a thick rind, edible flesh, and many seeds
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
pumpkin
1640s, alteration of pompone, pumpion “melon, pumpkin” (1540s), from Middle French pompon, from Latin peponem (nominative pepo) “melon,” from Greek pepon “melon,” probably originally “cooked (by the sun),” hence “ripe;” from peptein “to cook”
3.)
Pumpkin + s -> pumpkins
Pumpkin + Seed -> pumpkinseed
Pumpkin + Seed + s -> pumpkinseed
See Word Matrix: Pumpkin for more related words.
4.)
Costume
1.) Noun: the distinctive style of dress of an individual or group
Verb: to dress in a particular set of clothes
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
Costume
from French costume (17c.), from Italian costume “fashion, habit,” from Latin consuetudinem (nominative consuetudo) “custom, habit, usage”
3.)
Costume + s -> costumes
Costume + ed -> costumed
Costume + ing -> costuming
Costume + er -> costumer
Costume + al -> costumal
Doublet: <custome>
from Old French costume “custom, habit, practice; clothes, dress”, from Vulgar Latin *consuetumen, from Latin consuetudinem (nominative consuetudo) “habit, usage, way, practice, tradition, familiarity,” from consuetus, past participle of consuescere “accustom,” from com-, + suescere “become used to, accustom oneself”
4.) The replaceable <e> marks the phonology of the <u>.
Zombie
1.) Noun: a corpse allegedly revived by witchcraft, especially in certain African and Caribbean religions
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
1871, of West African origin (compare Kikongo zumbi “fetish;” Kimbundu nzambi “god”), originally the name of a snake god, later with meaning “reanimated corpse” in voodoo cult; perhaps also from Louisiana creole word meaning “phantom, ghost,” from Spanish sombra “shade, ghost”
3.)
Zombie + s -> zombies
Zombie + like -> zombielike
4.) The <ie> is a digraph, or a grapheme that consists of two letters.
Cauldron
1.) Noun: a large metal pot with a lid and handle, used for cooking over an open fire
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
1300, caudron, from Anglo-French caudrun, Old North French cauderon (Old French chauderon “cauldron, kettle”), from augmentative of Late Latin caldaria “cooking pot,” from Latin calidarium “hot bath,” from calidus “warm, hot”
The unetymological <l> was inserted during the 1400s in imitation of Latin.
3.)
Cauldron + s -> cauldrons
caldera, 1865, from Spanish caldera, literally “cauldron, kettle,” from Latin caldarium “hot-bath” (plural caldaria), from caldarius “pertaining to warming,” from calidus “warm, hot”
calid, 1590s, from Latin calidus “warm”
4.) The <au> is a digraph, or a grapheme that consists of two letters.
Ghastly
1.) Adjective: (1) causing great horror or fear; frightful, (2) extremely unwell
2.) complex word
Ghast + ly -> ghastly
from ghastly, from gastlich “inspiring fear or terror, hideous, shocking”
gast “afraid, frightened” + –lich “-ly”
from Old English gæstan “to torment, frighten”
If earlier gast was spelled with <g>, why is modern ghast spelled with <gh>?
The <gh> spelling developed in the 1500s on the model of ghost, which was influenced by Flemish and Middle Dutch gheest.
3.)
Ghast
Ghast + ly + er -> ghastlier
Ghast + ly + est -> ghastliest
4.) The <gh> is a digraph, or a grapheme that consists of two letters.
Ghost
1.) Noun: an apparition of a dead being, Verb: (1) to glide smoothly and effortlessly, (2) to end a personal relationship by suddenly and without explanation disappearing
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
from Old English gast “breath; good or bad spirit, angel, demon; person, man, human being,” in Biblical use “soul, spirit, life”
The <gh> spelling appeared in the 1400s in Caxton, influenced by Flemish and Middle Dutch gheest
3.)
Ghost
Ghost + s -> ghosts
Ghost + ed -> ghosted
Ghost + ing -> ghosting
Ghost + ly -> ghostly
Ghost + ly + er -> ghostlier
Ghost + ly + est -> ghostliest
Ghost + ly + ness -> ghostliness
Ghost + y -> ghosty
Ghost + Like -> ghostlike
Ghost + Write -> ghostwrite
4.)
Ghoul
1.) Noun: an evil spirit or phantom
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
originally goul from 1786 in the English translation of William Beckford’s Orientalist novel Vathek (originally written in French), from Arabic ghul, from ghala
The <gh> spelling arose from the semantic similarity with ghost and ghastly
3.)
Ghoul
Ghoul + s -> ghouls
Ghoul + ie -> ghoulie
Ghoul + ie + s -> ghoulies
Ghoul + ish -> ghoulish
Ghoul + ish + ly -> ghoulishly
Ghoul + ish + ness -> ghoulishness
4.)
Enchant
1.) Verb: (1) to practice sorcery or witchcraft on, (2) to delight in a high degree, charm, fascinate
2.) complex word
en + Chant -> enchant
from Old French enchanter “bewitch, charm, cast a spell,” from Latin incantare “to enchant, fix a spell upon,” from in- “upon, into” + cantare “to sing”
perhaps a backformation of enchantment, from Old French encantement “magical spell; song, concert, chorus,” from enchanter “bewitch, charm,” from Latin incantare “enchant, cast a (magic) spell upon,” from in– “upon, into” + cantare “to sing”
en-: upon, into (encircle, enclose)
Chant: sing, song
3.)
Chant
Chant + s -> chants
Chant + ed -> chanted
Chant + ing -> chanting
en + Chant + ment -> enchantment
en + Chant -> enchant
en + Chant + s -> enchants
en + Chant + ed -> enchanted
en + Chant + ing -> enchanting
en + Chant + (e)r -> enchanter
en + Chant + (e)r + ess -> enchantress
4.)
Skeleton
1.) Noun: (1) an internal or external framework of bone, cartilage, or other rigid material supporting or containing the body of an animal or plant, (2) the supporting framework, basic structure, or essential part of something
2.) complex word
Skelete + on -> skeleton
1570s, from Modern Latin sceleton “bones, bony framework of the body,” from Greek skeleton soma “dried-up body, mummy, skeleton,” from neuter of skeletos “dried-up,” from skellein “dry up, make dry, parch”
3.)
Skelete + on + s -> skeletons
Skelete + al -> skeletal
Skelete + al + ly -> skeletally
endo + Skelete + on -> endoskeleton
exo + Skelete + on -> exoskeleton
4.)
Vampire
1.) Noun: a creature from folklore that subsists by feeding on the vital essence of the living
2.) Simple word (one morpheme)
1734, from French vampire or German Vampir (1732, in an account of Hungarian vampires), from Hungarian vampir, from Old Church Slavonic opiri
3.)
Vampire + s -> vampires
Vampire + ic -> vampiric
Vampire + ism -> vampirism
Vampire + ish -> vampirish
4.) The <e> marks the phonology of the <i>.
Trick
1.) Noun: a prank, something that fools or swindles, Verb: to fool, to deceive
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
from Old North French trique “a deceit, treachery, cheating,” from trikier “to deceive, to cheat,” variant of Old French trichier “to cheat, trick, deceive,” a word of uncertain origin
3.)
Trick
Trick + s -> tricks
Trick + ed -> tricked
Trick + ing -> tricking
Trick + y -> tricky
Trick + sy -> tricksy
Trick + ster -> trickster
Trick + ery -> trickery
Etymological relatives: intricate, extricate, treachery
4.)
Treat
1.) Noun: something that gives pleasure, Verb: (1) to give something that gives pleasure, (2) to behave toward or deal with in a certain way, (3) to give medical care or attention to
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
from trēten “negotiate, debate or discuss for the purpose of settling a dispute,” from Old French traitier “deal with, act toward; set forth,” from Latin tractare “manage, handle, deal with, conduct oneself (in a certain manner) toward,” literally “drag about, tug, haul, pull violently,” frequentative of trahere (past participle tractus) “to pull, draw”
The “something that gives pleasure” meaning developed by 1710
3.)
Treat
Treat + s -> treats
Treat + ed -> treated
Treat + ing -> treating
Treat + er -> treater
Treat + able -> treatable
Over + Treat -> overtreat
re + Treat -> retreat
pre + Treat -> pretreat
mis + Treat -> mistreat
mis + Treat + ment -> mistreatment
mal + Treat -> maltreat
mal + Treat + ment -> maltreatment
en + Treat -> entreat
Treat + ise -> treatise
Etymological relatives: tract
4.)
Candy
1.) Noun: (1) a sweet food made with sugar or syrup combined with fruit, chocolate, or nuts, (2) sugar crystallized by repeated boiling and slow evaporation
2.) simple word (one morpheme)
from Middle English sugre candy “crystallized sugar,” from Old French çucre candi “sugar candy,” ultimately from Arabic qandi, from Persian qand “cane sugar,” probably from Sanskrit khanda “piece (of sugar)”
3.)
Candy + es -> candies
Candy + ed -> candied
Candy + ing -> candying
4.)