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principal principle

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Kingaroo | 16:00 Mon 27th Feb 2006 | Phrases & Sayings
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Anyone have a good mnemonic? I know the difference, but a coworker keeps getting it wrong and I'd like to tactfully tell her "how I keep them straight."


We are talking about principal investigators and principal motives and such, not principals (headmasters) of schools, so I can't use the one I learned as a child, that the principal is your pal.

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Not sure you need a mnemonic... Principal is the adjective meaning chief, key, main etc. Principle is the noun meaning a tenet, a belief you hold dear etc.

The only exception that you need to remember is the noun use of principal: as you say, the head of a school etc. But that's only spelled like that because he's the 'main man'.
I don't know a traditional one but if you take the last letter, L is for leader and E is for ethics. Hope this helps.

Principal - head - both a before the end


like stationary - think train


hope that helps! (a bit!)

"The principal is your pal" is the mnemonic given on the site Common Errors in English.

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