50 Words Indians Always Spell Wrong
Indian students make specific spelling mistakes that are different from what British or American kids get wrong. Why? Because Hindi and other Indian languages are phonetic — you spell what you hear. English isn’t! This causes predictable errors.
This page targets the 50 spelling mistakes most common in Indian schools — from essays and exams to competitive tests. Each word shows the typical Indian misspelling and the correct form. Fix these and your marks will improve immediately!
🗣️ Pronunciation-Based Errors
📝 Double Letter Confusion
🇮🇳 Indian English Spelling Habits
📝 Exam & Essay Words
🔀 Commonly Confused in India
📐 5 Spelling Rules
Hindi Is Phonetic, English Isn’t!
In Hindi, you spell what you hear. In English, ‘pronunciation’ sounds like ‘pronounciation’ but is spelled differently. Always check, don’t trust your ears!
Indian Double Letter Traps
Indians often add wrong doubles: tomMorow (should be toMorrow), or miss doubles: sucess (should be suCCeSS). Learn which letters double!
Two Words vs One Word
A LOT = always 2 words. CANNOT = usually 1 word. ALREADY = 1 word (≠ all ready). Learn which are joined!
Their/There/They’re
THEIR = possession (has HEIR). THERE = place (has HERE). THEY’RE = they are (apostrophe!). Indian students mix all three.
Lose vs Loose
LOSE (1 O) = not win, misplace. LOOSE (2 O’s) = not tight. Indians commonly write ‘loose’ when meaning ‘lose’.
🐝 Spelling Quiz
🔀 Word Scramble
Unscramble the letters
✏️ Fill in Missing Letters
Type the missing letters
❓ FAQ
Why do Indians make different spelling mistakes?
Indian languages (Hindi, Tamil, Telugu etc.) are phonetically consistent — you spell what you hear. English has silent letters, double letters, and spellings from French/Latin that don’t match pronunciation. This phonetic expectation causes specific Indian spelling patterns.
What’s the most common Indian spelling mistake?
‘Pronounciation’ (should be ‘pronunciation’) is the most ironic. Others: ‘seperate’ (separate), ‘definately’ (definitely), ‘recieve’ (receive), and ‘occassion’ (occasion).
Why do Indians confuse lose/loose?
In Hindi, the distinction between OO sounds doesn’t affect spelling. In English, lose (LOOZ, 1 O) and loose (LOOSS, 2 O’s) look similar but mean different things. ‘I don’t want to loose’ should be ‘I don’t want to lose’.
Is ‘alot’ a word?
No! ‘A lot’ is ALWAYS two words. ‘Alot’ doesn’t exist in English. This is one of the most common errors in Indian student essays.
Their vs there vs they’re — easy way to remember?
THEIR has HEIR (inheriting = possession). THERE has HERE (place). THEY’RE has an apostrophe (= they are, contraction). Test by replacing: ‘They are happy’ → ‘They’re happy’ ✅