While other states are tripping over "pneumonia" or "beautiful," Floridians are consistently turning to their search bars to figure out how many M’s and R’s are required for the following day. Here is a look into why this specific word—and a few others—give the peninsula so much trouble.
The "Tomorrow" Trap
It sounds simple, but tomorrow is a phonetic minefield. In Florida, the most common error is doubling the wrong consonant—usually resulting in "tommorrow" or "tommorow."
Why the confusion?
- The Double-Consonant Dilemma: English is notorious for arbitrary double letters. Because the "o" in the first syllable is short, many people intuitively feel there should be a double "m" to "protect" that vowel sound (similar to words like hammer or mammal).
- Rhythm and Stress: When we speak, the stress is on the second syllable (muh-row). This leads the brain to focus on the "R" sound, often causing people to forget that the "M" remains single.
The Runners-Up: Receipt and Pneumonia
While "tomorrow" takes the crown for the most-searched spelling in recent years, Florida has also historically struggled with two other heavy hitters:
1. Receipt
Florida often ranks high for misspelling receipt (frequently typed as reciept).
-
The Culprit: The "i before e except after c" rule. While "receipt" actually follows this rule perfectly, the rule itself is so riddled with exceptions (weird, glacier, science) that many people have developed a mental block against it entirely.
2. Pneumonia
Given Florida's large retiree population, health-related terms see a lot of search volume.
-
The Culprit: The silent "P." Derived from the Greek word pneumon (lung), the word starts with a consonant cluster that doesn't exist in spoken English. Without the "P" sound, the brain naturally wants to start the word with an "N."
Is Florida Alone?
Not quite. Spelling struggles are a national pastime. For comparison:
- California often struggles with "beautiful."
- Massachusetts has a hard time with its own name and "schedule."
- The Midwest is frequently baffled by "vacuum."
How to Remember "Tomorrow"
If you’re a Floridian (or just a human) tired of the red squiggly line, try this mnemonic:
"To + Morrow"
Since "morrow" is an old word for morning, you only ever need one "M." Just think of it as "to the morrow."
While Florida may not be winning the National Spelling Bee this year, there is a silver lining: at least "tomorrow" is a word of optimism. Whether you spell it with one M or two, it’s always just a day away.