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SPELLING
For its spelling authority the New Handbook of Texas has generally used Webster's Ninth New Collegiate
Dictionary (1983) and its successor, Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (Tenth Edition, 1993). American spellings are used where
possible, though the occurrence of British spellings in proper nouns often requires an exception; theatre is probably the most common British spelling in
the New Handbook.
Misspellings that occur in quotations are not marked by sic. The editors have attempted to quote accurately and to avoid
sprinkling editorial exculpations around.
The numerous variant spellings of names of Indian groups
result in general from the wide variation in how Europeans heard the names.
Frenchmen heard and spelled group designations differently from Spaniards, and
Anglo-Americans heard and spelled something else again. Moreover, individual
Spaniards, for instance, multiplied spellings from person to person. One
Franciscan heard and wrote one thing, and the next heard and wrote differently.
To compound the difficulty, authors of secondary works sometimes introduced new
terms or took as group designations words that denoted something else. The
occasional consequence is a dazzling array of different spellings of the same
word, or, occasionally, a group name that denotes no group. The editors have
followed the lead of the first edition of the Handbook and its
Supplement in the entry forms of Indian group names. This does not, however, imply that these are the "right" spellings; they are merely convenient. Variant
spellings are listed in parentheses.
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