Raccoon
Ok, so this
isn’t a word you find yourself writing down very often, but it’s one of a
number of words where there is a genuine choice. Do you spell it raccoon or racoon? Looking up the word in a dictionary reveals
that both options are acceptable, although the OED claims that raccoon is the more
common, particularly in the US. If that
kind of uncertainty troubles you, be grateful that we haven’t retained any of
the earliest spellings of this word. It
was first adopted in English in the sixteenth century from the Native American language used in
Virginia, known as Algonquian, where the word appears as aroughcun. Early attempts to render the word in English
spelling led to a rich variety of fiendishly difficult spellings, such as rahaugcum,
rarowcun, raugroughcum, and arathkone. The earliest occurrence in English recorded
by the Oxford English Dictionary
appears in a description by the colonialist John Smith of a native American
bedspread:
Their Emperour proudly lying upon a Bedstead a foote high,
upon tenne or twelve Mattes, richly hung with manie Chaynes of great Pearles
about his necke, and coverd with a great Covering of Rahaughcums.
The spelling rackoon was adopted
by Dr Johnson in his Dictionary of
1755, while raccoon and racoon were contemporary alternatives. Searching Google for these spellings today
suggests that raccoon is indeed the more
frequently used of the two. However, racoon is still widely recorded, largely
thanks to its unlikely association with a Dutch rock band, a company offering
hair extensions and a mobile phone payment tariff.