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Dilemna Dilemma

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AB Editor | 11:21 Mon 24th Jan 2011 | Phrases & Sayings
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Recently there was discussion by Simon Mayo & Mark Kermode on 5 Live.

In GB English is it Dilemna or Dilemma?

While it is of little concern to me, I wonder what the general consensus was on this? Also, is it a regional difference?

All the best,

Spare Ed
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Of course!
Im amazed (and sschh I even googled it).That is the way I was taught how to spell it. Found I certainly wasnt alone -millions use the'n' and its obviously wrong.Wonder how that came about-really puzzled now.
I had never encountered the 'mn' spelling prior to the Mayo/Kermode show
Question Author
Thanks everyone.

Any ideas about the source of the N? Any bets on hand-writing mistake?
You're thinking of Autumn, aren't you? ;-P
There is a separate WORD, lemNa, in modern Latin, meaning a kind of aquatic plant sometimes confused with duckweed. It is listed in Linnæus's 'Genera Plantarum'.

However, as already made clear above, it has naught to do with dilemma!
so the only two people in the univrerse who think it could be 'dilemna' have actually been found together on the same programme on 5 Live?

What are the chances, eh?
But has anyone seen a dilemma....apparently they have horns so are probably some sort of goat or antelope
mind you, I'm the only person in the universe who knows about the univrerse, so I can talk.
I've never heard of dilemna. Perhaps it's one of those regional words. For example, in Bristol people say "I've got a good IDEAL", but they really mean IDEA. But to us, it has a different meaning. I original thought my Bristol friend was just being stupid, but then I heard all his friends saying the same thing too.
Apparently, in Bristol, there is a cameral obscural.
What's that, Quizmonster?
I always say and spell it dilemma, didn't know you could do it the other way.
You can't do it the other way really. It's just a regional thing probably.
Mayo was born in Southgate, Kermode in Barnet...............I wonder if that has any bearing ?
As you pointed out, Notafish, some Bristolians tend to put a letter 'l' after the final 'a' in words ending thus. Accordingly, for them, what the rest of us call a camera obscura is a cameral obscural. For information on what THAT is, click
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura

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