American and British spellings of some words diverged in the early 19th century. Jewellery is simply the British spelling of the American word jewelry.
The difference between jewelry and jewellery is correct versus incorrect spelling. "Jewelry" is the correct spelling.
Savior is the American spelling. Saviour is the British spelling.
The British spelling is "aluminium"; the American spelling is "aluminum."
Favorable is the American spelling. Favourable is the British spelling.
That is the correct spelling of the word "jewelry" (uncapitalized).
The correct US spelling of the word is jewelry(jewellery in the UK).
American and British spellings of some words diverged in the early 19th century. Jewellery is simply the British spelling of the American word jewelry.
The difference between jewelry and jewellery is correct versus incorrect spelling. "Jewelry" is the correct spelling.
The US spelling is jewelry. The predominant UK spelling is jewellery.
That is the correct US spelling of "jewelry." The primarily UK variant is jewellery.
The correct spelling is "jewellery." This is the standard spelling used in British English and in many other English-speaking countries outside of North America. In American English, the word is spelled "jewelry." Both spellings refer to decorative items such as rings, necklaces, bracelets, and earrings made from precious metals and gemstones.
American spelling is 'recognized'. British spelling is 'recognised'.
The most popular jewelry on HSN is the collection by Tori Spelling, and Victoria Wieck.
An Italian jewelry company whose spelling begins with the letter "D" is Damiani.
An American spelling is a spelling of an individual work such as is preferred in the United States as opposed to the United Kingdom or elsewhere.
The British spelling is "squash" and the American spelling is also "squash." Both countries use the same spelling for this word.