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1->''"In honour of you guys, we're naming this band'' 'Ironheade'. ''With an 'e' at the end, so people know we mean business!"''
2-->-- '''Eddie Riggs''', ''Videogame/BrutalLegend''
3
4The tendency for common words describing fantasy concepts to be deliberately misspelled, typically:
5
6* As a way of distinguishing the "real" concept from the fake version, such as "{{Magick}}" versus stage magic.
7* [[YeOldeButcheredeEnglishe As a way of implying great age]]. This is somewhat TruthInTelevision, because before spelling was codified words ''could'' be spelled in a number of different ways, though in modern fantasy it is often gratuitous and may not even reflect the way a word was really spelled in any ancient languages.
8* As a way of being pretentious.
9* [[RuleOfCool It looks]] [[XtremeKoolLetterz Kool]]
10
11Common words spelled this way are "magic", "vampire", "fairy", and "fantasy", among others. See also MyNaymeIs, XtremeKoolLetterz, HeavyMetalUmlaut, TheBackwardsR, PunctuationShaker, AVillainNamedZrg and LawOfAlienNames. Depending on the word, the author may instead decide that CapitalLettersAreMagic.
12
13A SuperTrope to {{Magick}}.
14
15''Also known as phantassie spælling, pfant'see pspaëllynnge, or fantaſy ſpelling.''
16----
17!!Examples/Exemplum
18
19[[foldercontrol]]
20
21[[folder:Fairy/Faerie/Phaery]]
22* ''Literature/ACourtOfThornsAndRoses'' uses "faerie"/"fae".
23* ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'' lampshades it:
24-->'''Tea:''' Fairies? Faeries? Phayrighies? It doesn't matter; they all mean the same thing.
25* ''Shelley Duvall's Series/FaerieTaleTheatre''.
26* ''Faerie Wars'' by James Herbert Brennan is odd in that it uses two spellings ("fairy" and "faerie") depending on who is saying the term, most probably to distinguish between the "real" thing and the more mainstream usage.
27** Also that Faerie is simply a humanoid race-- fairy is the word confused humans have for them when they come into our world and grow wings as a result of the transportation (we do the same when we transport there).
28** Along with "faerie," there are uses of both "Hael/Hell" and "Haven/Heaven" at various points in the series. Almost always, the PhantasySpelling is used by faeries and the normal spelling is used by human characters, although Mr. Fogarty switches over to the faerie spellings after moving to the Faerie Realm.
29* ''Literature/JonathanStrangeAndMrNorrell'': The magical otherworld is spelled "Faerie", while its inhabitants are called "Fairies". (In English, at least. In their own language (which is apparently Irish), they're the Sidhe; their name for their homeland is never given.) This distinction is not uncommon in fantasy generally.
30** One of the short stories in the connected story collection ''The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories'' has its semi-literate narrator refer to fairies as [[Literature/TheBible "Pharisees"]]. Obviously, she has a confusion in terminology, but since the fairies of the stories are often somewhat different than Strange and Norrell fairies, a different term might be justified.
31** "Pharisees" as a term for fairies really has been used in various rural locations across England, mostly Sussex but also Somerset where the above story is set.
32** There's at least one of Creator/RudyardKipling's ''Literature/PuckOfPooksHill'' stories, set in Sussex, where a farmer uses "Pharisees" in this sense.
33* Lampshaded in Creator/KimNewman's story "Literature/TheGypsiesInTheWood", featuring a series of children's stories about faeries (including ''The Aerie Faerie Annual''). One character rhetorically asks what's wrong with the word "fairy".
34* Averted in ''Goblin Moon'', where "fairy" is the name of the race, while "Fae" and "Farisee" are apparently two different ''nationalities'' within that race. (The Biblical overtones of the latter may be intentional, as some of Creator/TeresaEdgerton's nonhuman cultures are analogs to real-world human cultures.)
35* In ''Literature/WickedLovely'', they are commonly referred to as the fey, one on it's own is a faery. The world is faerie.
36* Extremely common in general in fantasy stories that mention fairies. They will usually be spelled Faerie or Faery.
37* In ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', it's faeries.
38* Both ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheDreaming'' and ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheLost'' go for "faerie" or "fae." In ''Lost'', it's divided up amongst "faerie/fae," lowercase (to refer to all things that draw power from the Wyrd), "Faerie," uppercase (to refer to [[EldritchLocation Arcadia]]) and "the True Fae" (to refer to [[TheFairFolk the Gentry]]).
39* ''Literature/{{Poison}}: A Phaerie Tale'' uses 'Phaerie,' naturally.
40* Most ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'' games use "fairy," but the original version of ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'' used "faerie." The GBA remake went back to "fairy."
41* ''Literature/TalesOfTheFiveHundredKingdoms'' splits the difference, with "fae" used for magical beings but "Fairy" given as an honorific for Godmothers, who are allowed to call themselves the Rose Fairy, the Lilac Fairy, etc.
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Fantasy/Phantasy]]
45* ''Manhwa/PHDPhantasyDegree'', likely spelled this way to evoke the real world higher-education degree, especially given how the main characters come from various WizardingSchool, and one of the main antagonist's goals is to reach the legendary "Master School Olympus" ([[TitleDrop which is also the original manhwa's title.]])
46* The ''VideoGame/PhantasyStar'' video games. The whole different spelling thing is true in both America and in Japan.
47* The older 8-bit ''VideoGame/{{Phantasie}}'' game series.
48* In ''Literature/TheBaroqueCycle'' by Creator/NealStephenson, it's consistently spelled "phant'sy". The apostrophe is actually there to indicate that the word "fancy" is a contraction of "fantasy", which is TruthInTelevision.
49* ''VideoGame/TalesOfPhantasia''.
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Vampire/Vampyr(e)]]
53* Parody in the "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS7E16Storyteller Storyteller]]" episode of ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'': "Buffy, Slayer of the Vampyrs". Andrew [[AcCENTUponTheWrongSylLABle actually pronounces "Vampyr" slightly differently]] to make the point, putting the stress on the second syllable rather than the first.
54** Later, in an episode of ''Series/{{Angel}}'' he even [[GotMeDoingIt gets Angel pronouncing it that way]].
55** Also, in the pilot there was an old-looking book titled ''Vampyr''. At least one season showed it on the opening credits.
56* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
57** Parodied in ''Literature/CarpeJugulum'':
58-->Vampyres are just the same, the only real difference being that they can't spell correctly.
59** ''Literature/{{Maskerade}}'' at some point mentions a "Vampyre whose morals were worse than his spelling" during a speculation about whose laugh would be scarier.
60* Another parody in ''ComicBook/{{Preacher}}'': Cassidy calls an exceptionally pretentious fellow vampire a "wanker", and the latter assumes it's an archaic variant of the word vampire.
61* One ''ComicBook/{{Blade}}'' series implies that vampires and vampyres are actually different things.
62* The TabletopGame/{{Ravenloft}} campaign setting makes the distinction explicit: vampyres are living, predatory humanoids who consume blood and have the ability to supernaturally dominate the minds of their prey; vampires (generally) follow their traditional depictions.
63** That setting did the same trick with "goblin"/"goblyn", making them two different monsters.
64* The Usenet group alt.vampyres.
65* The first vampire novel published in English, ''Literature/VarneyTheVampire'' [[http://varney.50megs.com/varney/images.htm spells the word in two ways]]; one cover uses "vampire" while the title page reads "vampyre".
66** However, the first vampire ''story'' published in English is called ''Literature/TheVampyre'' and uses that spelling exclusively.
67* The Vampyr boss from the Sega CD game ''Vay'' (in addition to being a lame-as-hell boss) doesn't even get the courtesy of having an "e" on the end of his name.
68* ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes''' [[StupidJetpackHitler 5th Column]] / [[NoSwastikas Council]] Vampyri are explicitly stated not be "true" vampires but the end result of a super-soldier program.
69* Brian Lumley's ''Literature/{{Necroscope}}'' series features the classic Romanian mythological variant "Wamphyri".
70* ''Literature/AmericanGods'' includes a very brief walk-on by a "wampyr". Mostly, this is to evoke the Slavic folk roots of the creature, and not simply to say that Creator/NeilGaiman's [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Vampires Are Different.]] Which hardly needs saying. Neil Gaiman's everything is different, at least from the pop culture version.
71* ''VideoGame/RuneScape''[='s=] vampires are vampyres (noted in the quest name "Vampyre Slayer"), with the tie-in novels being the current notable exception spelling-wise.
72** This would be because originally they were all called vampires, then the race was split into the mindless vampires and the intelligent and stronger vampyres, then in mid-2011 they were changed again so the race as a whole was called vampyre, with the intelligent ones referred to as vyres. The novels were released before the changes to spelling and terminology.
73* The darkangels of Meredith Ann Pierce's ''Literature/TheDarkangelTrilogy'' is variously called darkangel, icarus or vampyre. As it turns out, a darkangel is a [[spoiler:human boy adopted by [[BigBad the witch]], raised as her son ''and'' lover. Eventually she drains his blood, gives him his wings, and gilds his heart with lead before sending him out to collect some souls for Mommy. When he succeeds, he flies home, Mommy drinks the souls like shots, as well as his own soul, which will make him a complete darkangel.]]
74* ''Literature/TheHouseOfNight'' would like to remind you that their vampyres are in fact super special. They have [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial no association with feral, violent 'vampires']] of any sort. Spelling vampyre with a 'y' both differentiates from these completely imaginary creatures and creates a cozy learning environment. The House of Night would also like to wish you a nice day.
75* Creator/ChristopherMoore's ''[[Literature/BloodsuckingFiends You Suck: A Love Story]]'' uses ''vampire'' most of the time, but switches to ''vampyre'' for Abby's diaries, to spoof how "gothic" she is.
76* While ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' has no vampires per se, the San'layn come close. One of the dungeon bosses in ''Wrath of the Lich King'', Prince Taldaram, has an attack called "Embrace of the Vampyr".
77* ''VideoGame/DarkenedSkye'':
78-->"You're the boss vampire?"\
79"With a Y. Spell vampyre with a Y!"
80* ''Film/NosferatuTheVampyre'', the 1979 remake of ''Film/{{Nosferatu}}''.
81* In the 2004 ''ComicBook/TheTombOfDracula'' mini-series, starring Marvel horror mainstay Blade, it's indirectly implied that a vamp''y''re is completely different from a vamp''i''re. From the context, they're apparently analogous to the real life vampire subculture, except they hobnob with actual vampires and are really obnoxious about it.
82* The 1932 horror film ''Vampyr''.
83* ''Literature/RedMoonRisingMoore'': Vampyres instead of "[[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampires]]"
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Other/Multiple]]
87* Creator/AleisterCrowley and the Wiccans following his example are responsible for the RealLife trend of adding a 'k' to the end of the word 'magic', ostensibly for the first reason in the description but more realistically for the second (magic had never been spelled that way in modern English, but it seems like an older spelling at first glance).
88** ''TabletopGame/MageTheAscension'' sometimes uses the -k spelling to indicate proper reality-warping magic(k), as opposed to lower-powered supernatural dabbling.
89** ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}} Thaumatology'' notes the variation and its origins; “Some people think this offers a useful distinction between stage trickery and the real supernatural deal; others consider it pretentious.”
90* The "Wi'tch" series of novels.
91* There's some confusion over the term "Dæmon".
92** Creator/HPLovecraft will occasionally use this to refer to evil spirits (''i.e,'' Demons).
93** ''Literature/HisDarkMaterials'' was a bit more on the ball with the original meaning: a shortening of the term "Agathos Dæmon", a benevolent [[OurSoulsAreDifferent guardian spirit]], "Daimon" meaning minor immortal or spirit. It is the eventual root of the Christian concept of "Demon", but indirectly.
94** ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' in an odd mix of sci-fi and fantasy. Orks ''vs.'' Orcs, Psykers ''vs.'' Psychics — and Daemons ''vs.'' Demons.(Daemon is the Latin spelling, which is understandable here because the Imperial High Gothic language is CanisLatinicus. Of course, TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasy likewise.) The Eldar and Dark Eldar make liberal use of peculiar spellings: Vyper hover-tanks, Wych cults, Haemonculi...
95** Marvel has more than one dimension called Limbo, so the one formerly ruled by Belasco and now by Magik of the New Mutants is referred to as ''Daemonic Limbo'' if you want to make things clear.
96* "Dwarfs ''vs.'' Dwarves".
97** Supplementary sources state that J.R.R. Tolkien discovered too late that "dwerrow" was an acceptable plural for "dwarf". Had he known that earlier he said he would have used it, and avoided the "dwarfs/dwarves" question. He realized too late for ''Literature/TheHobbit'', but in ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' he did use "Dwarrowdelf" as a translation for ''Khazad-Dûm''.
98** In ''Literature/TheWanderingsOfWuntvor'' books by Creator/CraigShawGardner, the plural is "dwarves" ... and the singular is "dwarve".
99** They're "duaroughs" in ''Literature/TheDarkangelTrilogy''.
100* "Elven ''vs.'' Elfin ''vs.'' Elvish".
101** The ''Elfs'' roleplaying game notes that during their culture's GoldenAge, elfs "spelled their plural differently".
102** The comic ''Poison Elves'' by Drew Hayes spells the adjectival form of elf as "elvin".
103* Creator/ChinaMieville's ''Literature/PerdidoStreetStation'' [[Literature/TheScar and]] [[Literature/IronCouncil sequels]] employ this trope heavily -- vampirs, chymistry, elyctric elementals.
104* Mention must be made of the series of young adult fantasy novels by Angie Sage whose titles include ''Magick, Flyte, Physik, Queste,'' and so on.
105* The roleplaying game ''VideoGame/ArcanumOfSteamworksAndMagickObscura'' shows off the use of "Magic as Magick" spelling already in its title, and magic is always referred to with such a spelling throughout the entire game. Given the industrial revolution setting and {{steampunk}} esthetics, a lot of the more technical language in the game is also influenced by outdated 18th and 19th century terminology and expressions (though not excessively and usually without archaic spellings).
106* The different tribes of Trollocs in ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'': Al'ghol, Ahf'frait, Bhansheen, Dha'vol, Dhai'mon, Dhjin'nen, Ghar'ghael, Ghob'hlin, Gho'hlem, Ghraem'lan, Ko'bal, Kno'mon.
107* In addition to the above vampire/vampyre example, various words in the ''Darkangel Trilogy'' have odd spellings, [[spoiler: which may be justified as corruptions of the original language of the Ancient Ones]]. Squatty underground-dwellers are [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame duaroughs]], big black birds are rhuks, scaly creatures are [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dracgs]], and sweet pale-orange fruits are apricoks.
108** And "lyons," "sfinxes," and (in ''Literature/TheFirebringerTrilogy'') "wyches."
109** Aside from the aforementioned corruptions, there is also the possibility that all of them would be, to us, MixAndMatchCritters which look sort of like their semi-namesakes. After all, the series also has [[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation technicolor humans]], and remember that [[spoiler: the entire place was terraformed by the Ancient Ones from Oceanus.]]
110* ''Webcomic/{{Erfworld}}'' somewhat subverts this by [[ElmuhFuddSyndwome replacing many an 'r' with a 'w']], resulting in gwiffons, dwagons and spidews. When the protagonist makes note of this and asks if it shouldn't be "dragon" instead, the other characters seem to be quite weirded out by these "incredible stupid words" and state that they "really don't want to know what you call spidews in Stupidworld or whatever you call it". Note that "erf" sounds slightly like "earth". "earthworld"?
111** It also has the effect of making the words sound childish, accenting the [[CrapsaccharineWorld "cutesy" trappings overlaid on a rather grim world]] of [[ForeverWar constant warfare]].
112* [[OurGryphonsAreDifferent Griffins, Griffons, and Gryphons]], {{Giant Flyer}}s one and all.
113** as well as griffen, griffoun, griffun, griffyn, grifo, grifon, grifyn, grefyne, gràobhín, griphin, griphon, gryffen, gryffin, gryffon, gryfon, gryphen, and gryphin.
114*** Justified in Edward Ormondroyd's ''David and the Phoenix'', where gryffens (lazy, dopey, and harmless), gryffons (big, mean, and territorial), and gryffins (red-feathered and friendly) are related but distinct species.
115*** ''VideoGame/EverQuest'' divides them into Griffawns (lowest-level), Griffennes (in the middle), and Griffons (highest-level)
116* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' parodies this occasionally, not only with the 'vampyres' mentioned above, but also with...
117** “Magick” (see above), which is the largely-useless modern attempt at witchcraft done by the younger witches who don't understand what they're doing.
118** Also "Wizzard", but that was an [[RougeAnglesOfSatin in-universe spelling error]] on Rincewind's part. It becomes a plot point in ''Literature/InterestingTimes'' when Unseen University is instructed to send "a Great Wizzard" and because there's only one wizard who spells it like that, [[ButtMonkey they send him]]. (The use of a different spelling for differentiation actually kind of applies. Rincewind is not like most wizards. Mainly, [[IneptMage he can't do any actual wizardry]].)
119* ''[=NightLife=]'', a small-press splatterpunk RPG, used "vampyres", "daemons", and "wyghts" as PC races. The non-player creatures' spellings were even weirder (trolles, goblynnes, toxxixs).
120* Sometimes this applies even outside of the fantasy genre. In the FourX strategy game ''VideoGame/MasterOfOrion II'', there is an energy weapon called a "phasor", an obvious ShoutOut to ''Franchise/StarTrek'''s "phaser".
121* In ''Literature/TheSecretsOfTheImmortalNicholasFlamel'', Flamel is called the Alchemyst and that's also used as the first book's title.
122* Many works call dragons wyrms. This is because "worm" ''is'' a traditional name for them, but has changed meaning, so the Phantasy Spelling is used to differentiate dragons from the mundane invertebrate type of worms.
123* In ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
124** Knights are "Ser" not "Sir".
125** PhantasySpelling is common in character names as well. A non-exhaustive list of these include:
126*** Eddard (Edward)
127*** Helaena (Helena)
128*** Laena (Lana)
129*** Alysanne (Alison)
130*** Cersei (Circe)
131*** Daario (Dario)
132*** Alys (Alice)
133*** Jeyne (Jane)
134*** Joffrey (Geoffrey)
135*** Myrcella (Marcella)
136*** Lysa (Lisa)
137*** Myranda (Miranda)
138*** Tytos (Titus)
139* ''Literature/RedMoonRisingMoore'': Werewulves instead of "[[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]]"
140* [[ParodiedTrope Parodied]] in ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}''. Rose's needlewands "crackle with the majyyk enyrjjies."
141* ''Literature/TheCrescentMoonKingdoms'': Justified, in that they're alternate transliterations of terms from Arabic. Still, the book is riddled with "alkhemy," "faroes," and of course, "ghuls."
142* A jokey example in ''Fanfic/TheKeysStandAlone: The Soft World'': The four inadvertently introduce pizza to C'hou. Whenever one of the inhabitants or outworlders mentions the food, it's always spelled “peetzah,” but when the four or the narrative use it, it's always “pizza.”
143* In ''VideoGame/SlayTheSpire'' names of various mundane animals, of all things, are given this treatment. Hence we get "byrd", "phrog", "krane" and "snecko". Aside from the last one, which seems to be a hybrid of snake and gecko, the others don't seem much different from their real world counterparts.
144[[/folder]]

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