Cheque vs Check


Cheque vs. Check  

293 members have voted

  1. 1. Which one?

    • Check
      87
    • Cheque
      206


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personally, i have never in my life used the spelling "cheque". that just looks foreign to me!

i'm from florida, USA. pretty much lived here my whole life (22 years old), and i think i would be offended if someone honestly called me uneducated just because i've grown up spelling it "check".

everyone should know that some words can be spelled/pronounced differently in different areas of the world. doesn't mean anyone is more or less educated than someone else, that assumption is just ridiculous.

Only seen "cheque" used in rare occasions. I thought it was like the old English version of the word or something, such as the word "shoppe" or "olde". Besides, you sign up for a "checking account" at your bank, not a "chequing account".

The correct words as per the ENGLISH language are:

1) A check box on a form.

2) A bank cheque.

Even wikipedia agrees: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheque

The spellings check, checque, and cheque were used interchangeably from the 17th century until the 20th century. However, since the 19th century, the spelling cheque (from the French word ch?que) has become standard for the financial instrument in the Commonwealth and Ireland, while check is used only for the verb "to verify", thus distinguishing the two definitions in writing. In American English, the usual spelling for both is "check".

If you use 1 to mean 2, then you are not speaking English. You are speaking some derivation of it, most probably American English. Because as we all know, the founding fathers had to change the spelling of many words just to distinguish themselves from the Motherland. In the same way that they decided to substitute 's' with 'z' in words such as visualise (vs visualize). Just had to be different, but couldn't be bothered to invent an entirely new language of their own ;)

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