Nope, not "never." Typos and misspellings are different.
Spelling foreword as foreward, or apparently as aparrantly, isn't a typo; it's a misspelling. The author's fingers didn't slip; he just didn't know the right spelling.
"Unites States" is a textbook typo IMHO, not a misspelling: the author could not possibly have believed United States was really spelled Unites States. The initial S in States was the next letter in the sequence, and the brain accidentally added an -s to Unite instead of the terminal -d. This is among the commonest varieties of typographical errors. (Source: am former editor)
Exception: if there were any discernible meaning whatsoever in "UniteS States" beyond wildly creative and fanciful imaginings on our part, then one could make a case for intentional misspelling. Since there isn't, it's probably just a typo.
Nope, not "never." Typos and misspellings are different.
Spelling foreword as foreward, or apparently as aparrantly, isn't a typo; it's a misspelling. The author's fingers didn't slip; he just didn't know the right spelling.
"Unites States" is a textbook typo IMHO, not a misspelling: the author could not possibly have believed United States was really spelled Unites States. The initial S in States was the next letter in the sequence, and the brain accidentally added an -s to Unite instead of the terminal -d. This is among the commonest variety of typographical errors. (Source: am former editor)
Exception: if there were any discernible meaning whatsoever in "UniteS States" beyond wildly creative and fanciful imaginings on our part, then one could make a case for intentional misspelling. Since there isn't, it's probably just a typo.
Nope, not "never." Typos and misspellings are different.
Spelling foreword as foreward, or apparently as aparrantly, isn't a typo; it's a misspelling. The author's fingers didn't slip; he just didn't know the right spelling.
"Unites States" is a textbook typo IMHO, not a misspelling: the author could not possibly have believed United States was really spelled Unites States. The initial S in States was the next letter in the sequence, and the brain accidentally added an -s to Unite instead of the terminal -d. This is among the commonest of typographical errors. (Source: am former editor)
Exception: if there were any discernible meaning whatsoever in "UniteS States" beyond wildly creative and fanciful imaginings on our part, then one could make a case for intentional misspelling. Since there isn't, it's probably just a typo.
Nope, not "never." Typos and misspellings are different.
Spelling foreword as foreward, or apparently as aparrantly, isn't a typo; it's a misspelling. The author's fingers didn't slip; he just didn't know the right spelling.
"Unites States" is a textbook typo IMHO, not a misspelling: the author could not possibly have believed United States was really spelled Unites States. The initial S in States was the next letter in the sequence, and the brain accidentally added an -s to Unite instead of the terminal -d. This is among the commonest of typographical errors. (Source: am former editor)
Exception: if there were any discernible meaning whatsoever in "UniteS States", then one could make a case for intentional misspelling. Since there isn't, it's probably just a typo.