English Language & Usage Asked by Nick Rolando on October 2, 2021
Which spelling is correct, “updatable” or “updateable”?
For example, “The file is not updat(e)able.”
By the way, I did go to Google and ref.dic.com for this first, and they both seem to indicate that both spellings are correct. If they are indeed both correct, which is more widely accepted?
Google Ngrams shows that updatable is currently much more prevalent:
Correct answer by Gnawme on October 2, 2021
You'll be in fine company either way. I looked thru some technical books online and found both widely benoted.
For me, updateable is the better choice but, as I said, either one is good.
Answered by AnWulf on October 2, 2021
Both of them are correct and acceptable.
Google Ngram shows that updatable is more prevalent than updateable.
However, the plausible answer would be: if the removal of final e from the base word changes the pronunciation of the preceding consonant, it's often incorrect and unacceptable but if its removal does not changes the pronunciation of the preceding consonant, it's usually correct and acceptable. (There are loads of exceptions, however.)
'T' gives the same sound /t/ before both 'a' and 'e', so it's OK to remove the final e from 'update' when it's suffixed. Updateable and updatable - both have /t/ sound (the removal of e does not change the pronunciation of the base word 'update') so both of them are correct and acceptable.
If the removal of final e changes the pronunciation of the preceding consonant, then the spelling without e is often incorrect and unacceptable.
Examples:
However, if the removal of final e does not change the pronunciation of the preceding consonant, both spellings (with and without e) are usually correct and acceptable.
Examples:
However, words that end with '-seable' are not very common.
Examples: Usable and useable:
Confusable and confuseable:
Response to a comment by Edwin Ashworth:
Lots of research and reasonable analysis. However, your 'rule' allows for noteable as well as "notable_; Wiktionary labels this 'a common misspelling', and it does not appear in CED, M-W
This guideline is only for suffixed words (which have the suffix -able).
Notable is directly derived from Latin word 'notabilis'.
Notable: mid-14c., "worthy of note, important, praiseworthy," from Old French notable "well-known, notable, remarkable" (13c.), from Latin notabilis "noteworthy, extraordinary," from notare "to mark, note, make a note," from nota "mark, sign, means of recognition" — [Etymonline]
Answered by Decapitated Soul on October 2, 2021
Google gives 1,120,000 for "updatable"
Google gives 619,000 results for "updateable"
Both are adjectives and right. You can use both. "Updatable" is more common than "updateable".
I prefer updateable, because the E after the T indicates that the first A should be pronounced as [ei]. In some places the word data is pronounced [d?ta], so for them the spelling updatable might be confusing.
I think which form of that term you use depends on the context and its part of speech in the sentence. In the predicate, it’s smoother to say not updateable, as in “The program is not updateable.” However, when you need an adjective before a noun, I have no problem with non-updateable in a technical context — Source
"updateable" is the alternative form of "updatable" — YourDictionary
Answered by user382280 on October 2, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Answers
Recent Questions
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP