Digraphs are 2-letter combinations found in words inherited from classical Latin and Greek. In some cases, the digraphs have been replaced by a single letter in modern English writing; in others their spellings are variable.
ae/e
Australians vary in their use of the digraph ae. We tend to make it just e when it occurs in the middle of a multisyllable word, but usually keep ae at the beginning of a word or in the first syllable:
aesthetic aetiology faeces haematology
The ae digraph that marks the plural form of Latin nouns ending in -a (e.g. larvae, pupae) is usually retained in scientific writing. Other kinds of Latin nouns (e.g. formula, persona) usually take English plurals (formulas, personas).
oe/e
Australians vary in their use of the digraph oe. We use it regularly at the beginning of a word, but less consistently in the middle of a multisyllable word, where it may be reduced to a single vowel:
amoeba diarrhoea homeostasis
ph/f
Different words use ph or f, depending on the word origin. English words with a Greek origin tend to use ph; others use f:
In a few cases, the word can be spelled either way. This is most familiar in the choice between sulphur and sulfur, where sulfur is mandated as the scientific spelling by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (see Chemistry terminology). Sulphur remains in the names of fauna (e.g. sulphur-crested cockatoo) and in literary usage as sulphurous.