Digraferert
Digraferert is a neologism used in linguistics to describe the state or property of a word or orthographic form that is written using digraphs—two-letter graphemes that together represent a single linguistic unit, such as a phoneme or morpheme. The term emphasizes the unit-level interpretation of two-letter sequences as a single graphic symbol within a writing system. Etymology: from di- “two” + graf (grapheme) + -ert (suffix forming adjectives/participles). The term is not widespread in standard grammars but appears in discussions of orthography, typographic encoding, and language documentation, especially when analyzing languages with digraph-based spelling or typographic reforms.
In practice, digraferert is used to categorize forms whose conventional spelling relies on digraphs for one
Critics note that the boundaries between digraferert and related ideas such as grapheme recognition or digraph