Style Guide Spelling Decisions

analyze: Style Guide Spelling Decisions (AP, Chicago, MLA, APA)

How AP, Chicago, MLA, APA, Garner's, and Merriam-Webster handle the spelling of "analyze". American 'analyze'; British 'analyse'. Unlike -ize/-ise, here Oxford does NOT prefer -yze for British English.

How major style guides rule on "analyze"

American 'analyze'; British 'analyse'. Unlike -ize/-ise, here Oxford does NOT prefer -yze for British English.

The disagreement on "analyze" is an example of systematic American vs British English differences, the category of style-guide differences that most often confuses copy editors and creates inconsistency across long documents. Below is a guide-by-guide breakdown, drawn directly from the published editions cited.

Style guide rulings on "analyze"
Style guide Preferred form
AP Stylebook (2024–2025 Edition)analyze
Chicago Manual of Styleanalyze
MLA Handbookanalyze
APA Publication Manualanalyze
Merriam-Webster Dictionaryanalyze (UK: analyse)

What the divergence actually means

Unlike many compound-modernization decisions where style guides eventually converge, "analyze" continues to show genuine divergence between major guides. The AP Stylebook treats this as a settled call; Chicago Manual leaves more flexibility; and Merriam-Webster, as a descriptive dictionary, records both forms. Source: Chicago Manual of Style, 17th Edition

The APA Publication Manual aligns with AP and Chicago on "analyze", though APA generally addresses spelling questions only when they intersect with statistical reporting or technical psychology vocabulary. Where the manual is silent, APA defers to Merriam-Webster as its standard reference. Source: APA Publication Manual, 7th Edition

Merriam-Webster lists "analyze (UK: analyse)", which serves as the lexicographic baseline for U.S. style decisions. Because Merriam-Webster's entries reflect aggregated published usage rather than editorial preference, when a guide says "follow Merriam-Webster", as APA does, that effectively delegates the call to whichever spelling has dominated the published corpus. Source: Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Garner's Modern English Usage classifies the "analyze" / "analyse" pair on its Language-Change Index, a five-stage scale measuring whether a once-disputed form has been accepted into Standard English. For systematic American vs British English differences, Garner's typically rates the dominant form at Stage 4 ("ubiquitous but objected to by traditionalists") or Stage 5 ("fully accepted"). Source: Garner's Modern English Usage, 5th Edition

Practical guidance for editors

For working writers, the practical rule is straightforward: in journalism, follow AP; in academic writing in the humanities, follow MLA or Chicago; in social-science publishing, follow APA; in book publishing, follow Chicago. When no house style applies, Merriam-Webster's main entry is the safest default. The differences across these guides on "analyze" reflect not disagreement about correctness but different audiences and editorial pressures.

Editorial context

Google Books Ngrams data illustrate the enduring regional divergence in 'analyze' versus 'analyse', with 'analyze' commanding over 99 percent of occurrences in the American English corpus from 1850 onward, while 'analyse' prevails at roughly 90 percent in the British English subset through the 2019 endpoint. This split persists despite global English's mid-20th-century tilt toward 'analyze' around 1940, driven by American publishing dominance. Such corpus evidence highlights a register nuance absent from style-guide tables: in international scientific literature, 'analyse' signals British or Commonwealth authorship, influencing copy editors to retain it for fidelity unless house style mandates otherwise. For instance, Analysts must analyse market trends quarterly to forecast demand preserves a UK register in a global report, underscoring how frequency data guides decisions beyond prescriptive rules toward contextual authenticity.

Cross-references

For the dictionary entry, frequency data, and pronunciation of analyze, see the main word page. For other style-guide spelling decisions in this category, browse all style-guide spelling rulings.

Last reviewed by the Plainspell Editorial team. See our methodology for how we source and verify style-guide rulings.