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Disemvoweling

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In the fields of Internet discussion and forum moderation, disemvoweling (also spelled disemvowelling) is the removal of vowels from text either as a method of self-censorship (for example, either "G*d" or "G-d" for those whose religious beliefs preclude writing God in full), or as a technique by forum moderators to suppress Internet trolling and other unwanted posting.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

Disemvoweling would leave the first sentence of this article looking like this:

n th flds f ntrnt dscssn nd frm mdrtn, Dsmvwlng (ls splld dsmvwllng) s th rmvl f vwls frm txt.

Disemvoweling text in this fashion reduces its readability. The technique has been facilitated by plug-in filters to automate the process. Because the letter y is sometimes a vowel and sometimes a consonant, there are a variety of ways to treat it. To remove it only where it is used as a vowel is not easily automated. Aside from an "all-or-nothing" approach, one option is remove a y only at the end of words, where it is virtually always a vowel.

The word follows the standard patterns of English orthography; i.e., it may be spelt either disemvoweling or disemvowelling, with the former generally preferred in U.S. English and the latter preferred in Commonwealth and Irish English.

References

  1. Scholastic Teaching Resources, Scholastic, Accessed August 09, 2006

Further reading

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