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15 Real Words That Were Invented by Accident

The English language is chock-full of words that were born out of errors. Read on to find out which everyday terms started out by mistake.

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Apron

Back in the Middle Ages, the French called this protective cooking gear a naperon. But once English speakers adopted the word, the phrase “a napron” often blended together when people said it out loud. As a result, “a napron” became “an apron,” instead—and we have spelled it that way ever since. Check out more accidental discoveries that changed the world.

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Algorithm

The original Medieval Latin version of this word, algorismus, was named after a famous Arab mathematician. But the term is actually just a bad translation of his last name, al-Khwarizmi. Don’t miss these common words that used to mean completely different things.

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Sneeze

Believe it or not, sneeze was originally spelled with an F, not an S—as in fneze. Why the change? According to one explanation, people often misread the lowercase f as the old-fashioned long S character, ſ. Eventually, the spelling error simply became the norm. Learn more about the six forgotten letters in the English alphabet.

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Squeeze

In Old English, the term quease meant to press or crush firmly. The extra “s” was mistakenly added later on, probably due to the word’s likeness to other expressions that begin with “squ-,” like squash and squat. You’ll never believe these silly-sounding words are real—but they are.

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Pea

One pea was originally called a pease in Middle English. However, it was often misinterpreted as a plural word, thanks to the last “s” sound. This led scholars to create a singular version of the word, pea, in the 17th century. According to Mental Floss, the actual plural of pease in Middle English was pesen.

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Nickname

A secondary or unofficial name in the late Middle Ages was an ekename—which literally meant “also-name.” Frequent references to “an ekename” eventually turned into “a nickname.”

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Sashay

Although the English borrowed the French word chasse—a verb that means “to chase”—to describe a “gliding step,” they butchered the pronunciation by swapping the “sh” and “s” sounds.

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Ammunition

Like “nickname” and “apron,” ammunition was born from an incorrect division. French soldiers in the Middle Ages misheard the French word “la munition” as l’amonition, and the English language later adopted this misspelling in the 17th century. On the other hand, these words mean the exact opposite of what you think.

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Varsity

This word originally started out as versity, a shortened version of university. No one knows exactly what happened, but somewhere down the line, the letter ‘e’ was swapped with ‘a.’ Here are more common words you’ll only find in English.

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Umpire

This word came from the French term “nompere,” or “one without equal.” But because the sounds blurred together when spoken out loud, “a noumpere” ended up becoming “an oumpere,” later forming the word we now know as umpire.

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Tornado

This word is actually a mistaken rendering of the Spanish term “tronada,” which means “thunderstorm.” Over time, speakers accidentally switched the “r” and “o,” creating the modern word tornado.

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Expediate

The verb expediate, which means “to hasten” or “to complete something promptly,” is believed to have been invented when English politician Sir Edwin Sandys misspelled expedite—meaning “ready for action” or “alert”—in an essay he wrote in the early 1600s. While the essay was later corrected, the spelling stuck. These fancy words will make you sound smarter.

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Culprit

The Middle French phrase Culpable, prest d’averrer nostre bille—translated as “guilty, ready to prove our case”—was what the Clerk of the Crown would say in response to a defendant’s “not guilty” plea. Court records, however, often shortened the long phrase to “cul. prit.” So when push comes to shove, what started out as a lazy abbreviation eventually created the word culprit.

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Ingot

Defined as “a brick-like solid mass of metal,” an ingot was originally called “lingot” in French. But when it was translated into English, some writers removed the letter L, believing it was the French abbreviation for “the.” They were wrong, of course, but the spelling has remained that way ever since.

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Scandinavia

Scandinavia has not always been this region’s title. At one time, its name did not include the first N, so it read as “Scadinavia.” The Oxford English Dictionary claims that a Roman scholar mistakenly added the extra N, and the rest is history. Don’t miss more words and phrases you’re probably using all wrong.

Brooke Nelson Alexander
Brooke is a tech and consumer products writer covering the latest in digital trends, product reviews, security and privacy, and other news and features for Reader's Digest. She's a two-time Emmy-nominated reporter with nearly 10 years of publishing experience, and her work has been recognized by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association.