NAME
spell, spellin, spellout - find spelling errors
SYNOPSIS
spell [ -v ] [ -b ] [ -x ] [ -d hlist ] [ -s hstop ]
[ -h spellhist ] [ file ] ...
spellin [ list ]
spellout [ -d ] list
DESCRIPTION
Spell collects words from the named documents, and looks
them up in
a spelling list. Words that neither occur among nor are
derivable
(by applying certain inflections, prefixes or suffixes) from
words
in the spelling list are printed on the standard output. If
no
files are named, words are collected from the standard
input.
Spell ignores most troff(1), tbl(1) and eqn(1) constructions.
Under the -v option, all words
not literally in the spelling list
are printed, and plausible derivations from spelling list
words are
indicated.
Under the -b option, British
spelling is checked. Besides
preferring centre, colour, speciality, travelled, etc., this
option
insists upon -ise in words like standardise, Fowler and the
OED to
the contrary notwithstanding.
Under the -x option, every
plausible stem is printed with ‘=’ for
each word.
The spelling list is based on
many sources. While it is more
haphazard than an ordinary dictionary, it is also more
effective
with proper names and popular technical words. Coverage of
the
specialized vocabularies of biology, medicine and chemistry
is
light.
The auxiliary files used for the
spelling list, stop list, and
history file may be specified by arguments following the -d,
-s,
and -h options. The default files are indicated below.
Copies of
all output may be accumulated in the history file. The stop
list
filters out misspellings (e.g. thier=thy-y+ier) that would
otherwise pass.
Two routines help maintain the
hash lists used by spell. Both
expect a set of words, one per line, from the standard
input.
Spellin combines the words from the standard input and the
preexisting list file and places a new list on the standard
output.
If no list file is specified, the new list is created from
scratch.
Spellout looks up each word from the standard input and
prints on
the standard output those that are missing from (or present
on,
with option -d) the hashed list file. For example, to verify
that
hookey is not on the default spelling list, add it to your
own
private list, and then use it with spell,
echo hookey | spellout
/usr/dict/hlista
echo hookey | spellin /usr/dict/hlista > myhlist
spell -d myhlist huckfinn
FILES
/usr/dict/hlist[ab] hashed spelling lists, American &
British,
default for -d
/usr/dict/hstop hashed stop list, default for -s
/dev/null history file, default for -h
/tmp/spell.$$* temporary files
/usr/lib/spell
SEE ALSO
deroff(1), sort(1), tee(1), sed(1)
BUGS
The spelling list’s coverage is uneven; new
installations will
probably wish to monitor the output for several months to
gather
local additions.
British spelling was done by an American.