Astronomy Common Knowledge Quiz.......
Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The episode of Morse you referred to actually had Sergeant Lewis criticising the writer of a suicide note containing a word spelled using IZE.
Inspector Morse pointed out that since the Oxford English Dictionary lists the IZE ending first, it was in fact Lewis that was illiterate for not knowing this.
I recently watched that episode of Inspector Morse and was surprised, as I'd always believed the "correct" spelling in the UK was -ise.
In the scene...
Lewis finds a suicide note on a computer hard drive that includes the words "apologise" and "civilised" spelled with "-ise." Morse declares the note a fake and points out the spelling, confusing Lewis who asks, "What's wrong with that?"
"Well it's illiterate, that's what! The Oxford English Dictionary uses a Z for words that end in '-ize', and so did [the victim]."
Morse points to other writing samples by the victim where they did in fact consistently use a Z. He goes on to call out another misspelling, again confusing Lewis. "Isn't that how you spell it?" At which point Morse condescendingly educates Lewis on the word's Latin roots, and closes with, "...as I would hope that anyone would know with a half decent education."
In the OED...
The online edition of the OED (the subscription to which is my annual Christmas gift to myself) has a fascinating write-up on the "-ize" suffix available at the link below (subscription required).
https:/
Paraphrasing here, the argument is that for many Greek words ending in -ίζειν (e.g., βαπτίζειν) and for which Latin borrowed as -izāre (e.g., baptizāre), the English spelling should be "-ize", and that the "-ise" spelling came via the French borrowing as "-iser."
This mostly echoes Quizmonster's answer, except for the discussion of the Latin borrowing.
The answer...
...is as ever, "It depends," especially as I'm a reluctant descriptivist.
In the U.S., "-ize" will probably draw fewer strange looks and fewer red squiggles under words. The "-ise" suffix will probably draw fewer looks and squiggles.
The only people who might give you a hard time are Inspector Morse, and whoever's marking your essays.
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