Thursday, February 25, 2010

Adviser, Advisor, Let's Call the Whole Thing Off.

This really bugs me sometimes as a three-time school spelling bee champ and word nazi: at USC, the traditional spelling of my job title is "advisor" with an "-or," which always triggers the judgmental red squiggly lines of shame of the spellcheck (of course, so does the word "spellcheck," so go figure). I know that when I first started this (fantastic) job a year and a half ago I had to have made at least a cursory attempt at checking the legitimacy of this traditional spelling, otherwise I'm certain I'd have lost it months ago. But I finally couldn't take the nagging fear that I might be participating in some plebian assault on proper English - the kind over which I normally make a noisy show of my distaste, even when I am on rare occasions proven to be in the wrong - that I had to see what the good old O.E.D. had to say on the matter. It is only mostly satisfying.


Adviser

Also advisor
[-OR][f. ADVISE + -ER1.
  Adviser remains the usual spelling, but advisor is freq. used (esp. U.S.) in the titles of persons whose function it is to give advice.
    1. a. One who advises or counsels. Also with qualifying word, as legal adviser, tax adviser, etc.
    b. Chiefly U.S. At some universities, a senior member assigned individually to advise students on personal, academic, or other matters. Cf. moral tutor s.v.