It can hardly be considered a "misspelling" if that's how it was intended to be spelled. So, quit being haughtyjerks about it.
1812, coined by (British chemist) Sir Humphry Davy (1778-1829), from L. alumen "alum" (see alum). Davy originally called it alumium (1808), then amended this to aluminum, which remains the U.S. word, but British editors in 1812 further amended it to aluminium, the modern preferred British form, to better harmonize with other element names (sodium, potassium, etc.).
It is the British version that is the "misspelling".
1662, from Sp. vainilla "vanilla plant," lit. "little pod," dim. of vaina "sheath," from L. vagina "sheath" (see vagina). So called from the shape of the pods.
vagrant's Comments
Comments by vagrant
vagrant commented on the word aluminium
It can hardly be considered a "misspelling" if that's how it was intended to be spelled. So, quit being haughty jerks about it.
It is the British version that is the "misspelling".
September 22, 2008
vagrant commented on the word vanilla
Interesting.
September 17, 2008
vagrant commented on the word feidian
Short for Feidianxing Feiyan (Atypical pneumonia), which is the Chinese term for SARS. I've always enjoyed the sound of it.
September 17, 2008