This page is a central place to discuss the British spelling of Medieval in Wikipedia articles.


User:El_T wrote the following at Talk:Britain in the Middle Ages

"Mediaeval" [is] used as being more British than medieval. Whilst it is true that mediaeval is relatively more common in the UK than the US, it is still far less common than medieval in both countries. Furthermore, a great many formal British institutions - The Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds for example - use the simpler, more modern spelling of medieval.

In other words, medieval is:

(Incidentally, the use of mediæval - with the a/e ligature - really isn't acceptable in modern English.)


Although this is a dead issue, out of idle curiosity I just checked Google and found that British sites (those ending .uk) use mediaeval slightly less than the overall sample.
  • 3.96% of the overall (5,480,000 of 138,480,000) use mediaeval.
  • 3.30% of the dot UK sites (434,000 of 13,134,000) use mediaeval
Enough trivia --SteveMcCluskey 21:54, 11 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Possibly, but here's another trivium: nobody includes the letter A, only the diphthong æ. Scolaire (talk) 00:00, 10 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, no. æ (more properly called ligature) is obsolete or obsolescent, the digraph ae (which really is composed of a + e) is not. I'm Jack(Lumber) and I approve this message. 23:05, 15 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Do make sure, though, that in a quotation, the spelling is that of the person being quoted. Likewise in a book title. I know that's obvious, but BOTs don't always think of it. --Doric Loon (talk) 18:42, 9 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]


TEN YEARS LATER

Really!?!?? The Oxford English Dictionary doesn't mention that Mediaeval is a contraction of the Latin term Medium Aevum (the Middle Age)?

That's not the OED of legend.

Heinrich Schliemann invested the better part of his life digging for Homer's Troy only to discover that, all that time, he'd actually been destroying its traces instead.

Fb2ts (talk) 14:10, 19 April 2018 (UTC)[reply]