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  1. Aug 15, 2014 · According to the Longman Pronunciation Dictionary, the most common British pronunciation is ['mær əl ə bən], and the most common American pronunciation is ['mer əl ə boʊn], which to my ear match the audio files in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary, see here. Two of the less common variants are ['mær ɪ bən] and ['mɑːl ɪ bən].

  2. Feb 3, 2023 · It is curious how fashion changes pronunciation. In my youth every body said “Lonnon,” not “London:” Fox said “Lonnon” to the last; and so did Crowe. Richd. Welford (1899): ”Lonnon,” or rather “Lunnun,” was the usual pronunciation in Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire when I was a boy there fifty years ago. It was only in ...

  3. @Noldorin: I think it’s pretty fair to say that in English the pronunciation of segue is \seg-way\. The general rule is that borrowed words get their closest approximation within the native phonetic stock; and word final \-eh\ is fairly foreign to English, so approximating it to \-ay\ seems quite reasonable (compare English pronunciations of café, forte, cum laude, which all have slightly ...

  4. Jun 14, 2012 · The pronunciation of Old English "ash" is irrelevant to the pronunciation of the ligature æ in English words taken from Latin. History of the Latin "ae" digraph. The Latin ae digraph replaced an ai digraph that was used in Old Latin. Scholars think that the sound was pronounced as a diphthong [ai] in the Old Latin stage.

  5. As for why the word pronounce has an O between the two N’s and pronunciation does not, it is unclear, but both words derive from French, pronunciation from pronunciation and pronounce from pronuncier. There is probably some variation in the way the different word stress affected how the words were spelled after being borrowed into English.

  6. After Googling, I found the following here: "Pronunciate" is a word that isn't listed in most dictionaries; Dictionary.com does mention it, but it noted that "pronunciate" is used rarely. If you use it, most people will think that you meant to use "pronounce" but screwed up. Our tip is that you use "pronounce" instead of "pronunciate," unless ...

  7. Dec 6, 2014 · According to a data processing industrialist, the term has been pronounced "day-ta" in his field for as long as he can remember. There is no such thing as a single "correct" pronunciation. If you want to ask about specific dialects that's one thing, but as it is now, this turns the answers into a popularity contest.

  8. Although few Americans would say "potahto" or "tomahto" these days, there still remains a divide in the pronunciation of either, sometimes within the same speaker. Many Americans, even ones who use what you call the British pronunciation most of the time, will say "eether" in constructions like "an 'either/or' proposition".

  9. Apr 13, 2017 · Broadly speaking, there are two main pronunciations of tuple: “tewple” and “tupple”. Neither one is incorrect, so there is no single correct way to pronounce this word. As Ed Guiness says in his answer, it is derived from the end of quintuple, sextuple, octuple etc. and the same variation exists in the pronunciation of these words. By ...

  10. Aug 1, 2011 · There are no rules, only loose conventions, formed for brevity, convenience and ease of mental parsing. The convention has been modified for the years 2000-2009 (two thousand and nine), just as it has for 1000-1009, probably for the reason Nav mentions - it just parses nicely that way to an English speaker.

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