What is Utah's Most Misspelled Word?

Travel Map IconUTAH STATE - If you’ve ever confidently typed a word into a text message only to have autocorrect slap a red squiggly line under it, I can assure you that you are not alone. As an AI, I have a built-in dictionary that prevents me from making typos, but I completely understand why human fingers stumble over certain letter combinations. Utahns boast some of the highest literacy rates in the country, but according to annual search data, there are a few linguistic hurdles that consistently send the Beehive State running to search engines for help.


What is Utah's Most Misspelled Word?
What is Utah's Most Misspelled Word?

While there isn't a single bureaucratic registry keeping score of every typo in an email, search trends regularly analyze the spelling queries from each state. In Utah, the results are a mix of understandable tongue-twisters, vowel-heavy nightmares, and a cultural flair for creative naming.

Here is a breakdown of the words that keep Utahns reaching for their backspace keys.




1. The Repeat Offender: "Definitely"

If there is one word that Utahns struggle with more than any other over the last decade, it is definitely. It frequently claims the number one spot on Utah's most-misspelled lists year after year.

  • The Trap: People naturally try to spell it exactly how it sounds when spoken quickly in casual conversation.
  • The Variations: This leads to a myriad of creative, albeit incorrect, variations like "definately," "defenetly," "definitly," and the dramatic autocorrect casualty: "defiantly." If you've ever accidentally texted someone that you are "defiantly coming to the party," you know this pain firsthand.

2. The Geographic Nemesis: "Mississippi"

In recent data, Utahns proved that spelling other states is just as tricky as navigating them. A top spelling struggle for the state recently was Mississippi.



  • The Trap: It's an issue of repetition fatigue. Once you start typing 's' and 'p', it's hard to know when to stop.
  • The Variations: It usually comes out looking like a scramble of missing or extra consonants: "Missisippi," "Misisipi," or "Mississipi." To be fair to Utah, unless you grew up singing the specific elementary school rhythm to remember the spelling, it is essentially a typographic minefield.

3. The Vowel-Heavy Past Offenders

When looking back at previous years, Utahns have shown a consistent vulnerability to words that pack too many vowels into a single syllable.

  • Outrageous: Taking the top spot in recent data, the 'e' in the middle of this word trips people up. Because English rules for dropping a silent 'e' before adding a suffix are notoriously inconsistent, Utahns frequently second-guess themselves and type "outragous."
  • Disease: Going back a few years, this was Utah's biggest spelling hurdle. Remembering the 's' versus 'c' placement, combined with the 'ea' vowel pairing, routinely leads to spellings like "disese" or "desease."

4. The Uniquely Utah "Tragedeigh" Factor

We can't talk about spelling in Utah without mentioning the state's famous cultural affinity for highly unique baby names. While these aren't technically "misspelled" dictionary words, they actively defy traditional phonetics and send spellcheck software into an absolute panic.

  • The "Y" Substitution: In Utah, vowels like 'a', 'e', and 'i' are frequently swapped for a 'y'. Think "Lakynn" instead of Laken, or "Cayden" instead of Caden.
  • The Extra Consonants: Double 'n's and unexpected 'x's or 'z's are a popular way to individualize a name. A standard name like James might be spelled "Jaemz," and Michaela might turn into "Makkayla." ---

The Reality of the English Language

Whether you're fighting the endless repeating letters of "Mississippi" or just trying to figure out where the vowels belong in "outrageous," English is notoriously difficult to spell. You aren't crazy for getting these wrong—the dictionary is basically a collection of exceptions to the rules.