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Uhm.
So, while it is related to narcotics officers, it’s nark
If you look at the definition you provided, right there on the second line underneath the word, it says: "Less common spelling of narc"
And if you pull up the definition for narc: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/narc
It contains all the different ways to use it in exactly the way I described in my first response to you :)
That is the correct spelling of it. Nark might be acceptable by webster's standards as a less common alternative, but it's not how that word was spelled or used until people started colloquially mis-spelling it. That is what merriam-Webster's does, they keep up with language as it evolves.
But to be clear, Nark is not the canon spelling for this. Narc is. Nark is a misspelling that became colloquially accepted. That does not make it the correct spelling 🙂
Read that again.
There are many hundreds of regional variations on how we use language, and if you want to go broad enough, spell words. (Center, Centre. Color, Colour. Defense, Defence.) If one were to somehow manage to catalogue everything in such fine detail, one's use of language would likely be able to be traced down to what highschool clique one belonged. Or cliques. For those of us that have moved to places that have moved... it might even be able to show that transition and place it in a time frame.
Further, it's slang. There is always some variation on slang; and correcting someone's spelling over informal... is asinine. you might have a point, if I were writing for a doctoral thesis where anything but formal, technical language is to be abhorred. But if this were a doctoral thesis, it would be just as innapropriate to use narc- because it is slang.
Next you're going to be explaining how it's "y'all" and not "ya'll" or " 'yall" or "yall" or even "youse all"
now go back to that first bit I quote and explain to me how language can possibly have a canon, particularly in informal, casual usage.