Haplography

Haplography (from Greek: haplo- 'single' + -graphy 'writing'), also known as lipography, is a scribal or typographical error where a letter or group of letters that should be written twice is written once. It is not to be confused with haplology, where a phoneme is omitted to prevent two similar sounds from occurring consecutively: the former is a textual error, while the latter is a phonological process.

In English, a common haplographical mistake is the rendering of consecutive letters between morphemes as a single letter. Many commonly misspelled words have this form. For example, misspell is often misspelled as mispell. The etymology of the word misspell is the affix "mis-" plus the root "spell", their bound morpheme has two consecutive s's, one of which is often erroneously omitted. The opposite of haplography is dittography.

The term haplography is commonly used in the field of textual criticism to refer to the phenomenon of a scribe, copyist or translator inadvertently skipping from one word or phrase to a similar word or phrase further on in the text, and omitting everything in between.[1] It is considered to be a form of parablepsis.

References

  1. This usage can be seen at Freedman, David Noel; Overton, Shawna Dolansky (2002). "Omitting the omissions: the case for haplography in the transmission of the biblical texts". In Gunn, David M.; McNutt, Paula M. "Imagining" Biblical Worlds: studies in spatial, social and historical constructs in honor of James W. Flanagan. Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series. 359. London: Sheffield Academic. pp. 99–116. ISBN 0-8264-6149-2.


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