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  • You've probably seen an email or an internet post

  • about how weird and random English spelling seems to be.

  • But what if I told you that it actually makes perfect sense?

  • In fact, that's spelling's job:

  • Making sense. Think of spelling a word

  • as peeling back the layers of an onion.

  • The first layer is a word's sense and meaning.

  • Often there are multiple layers of meaning.

  • Another layer is the word's structure.

  • Think of the center of the onion as a word's base element,

  • its essential kernel of meaning.

  • A free-base element, like O-N-E,

  • or T-W-O,

  • can stand on its own as a word,

  • like one, or two.

  • A bound base, like the R-U-P-T of "erupt" or "rupture"

  • needs another element in order to surface in a word.

  • Two or more bases

  • give us compounds, like "twofold" or "someone" or "bankrupt."

  • Once we figure out a word's meaningful elements,

  • We can peel back its history to shed a little more light

  • on why it's spelled as it is.

  • The word "two," for example,

  • needs its "W" in order to mark its connection

  • to words like "twice," "twelve," "twenty,"

  • "twin" and "between."

  • A word's history is another layer of the onion.

  • With that understanding, let's investigate the word "one."

  • First we need to check in with what it means.

  • Unique, single, solitary.

  • "One's" historical layers include its relatives

  • "only," "once," "eleven," and even "a,"

  • "an" and "any."

  • But it's the morphological relatives -

  • the ones that share the base O-N-E -

  • That are really astonishing.

  • There are the familiar ones, like "anyone,"

  • and "one-track" and "oneself" - those are obvious.

  • But let's take a look at some unexpected derivations

  • of the word "one."

  • The word "alone" is built from the prefix A-L plus the base O-N-E.

  • It's the same A-L prefix that we see

  • in "always," "already," "almighty" and "almost."

  • It means "all."

  • the word "alone" means "all one."

  • It was misanalysed in the middle ages

  • as having the prefix "a," like in "asleep" and "awake" and "around,"

  • and a new base was born: L-O-N-E,

  • which then developed into its own family.

  • In the word "atone," we find the familiar preposition "at"

  • compounded with the base O-N-E.

  • See, when we atone for something we've done wrong,

  • we attempt to make things whole again,

  • to fix what's broken, to be at one again with whomever we hurt.

  • But here's perhaps the best one of all:

  • the word "onion," which is also frequently derided as irregular

  • or crazy, for its spelling of "uh" with an O.

  • But again, if we look into the word's structure,

  • and its history, it's a mystery no more.

  • When we look at the roots of an onion,

  • we learn that it is written as O-N-E plus I-O-N,

  • the same suffix we find in "tension," "action," "union"

  • and thousands of other words in English.

  • Unlike the many cloves in a head of garlic,

  • an onion has a single bulb.

  • It is marked by the state or condition of oneness.

  • Like an onion, English is one -

  • one single writing system shared across time and space.

  • Its structure and its history have many layers,

  • and peeling them apart can really add flavor to our language

  • and spice up our understanding. See, spelling is never just about spelling,

  • but about how written words make sense.

  • It's almost enough to make you want to cry.

You've probably seen an email or an internet post

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