Crosswords4 mins ago
How Do You Pronounce Almond?
61 Answers
Just listening to someone on the TV pronouncing Almond over and over again as AL -MOND, the AL (not ALL) very pronounced. I say ARE-MOND so which is correct?
ALL -MOND
AL-MOND
ARE-MOND
ALL -MOND
AL-MOND
ARE-MOND
Answers
dialect ooop t North - the ay is short and the el is sounded clearly darn sarth - ay is long ( old long, and before the gt vowel shift 1375 ) as in father and the el silent The hindi for almond is pit-pit
09:22 Sun 07th Dec 2014
there was a vowel shift though it continued after 1375
http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Great_ Vowel_S hift
I say aamond, with the stress on the first syllable. When some people have written their pronunciation as armond I wonder if this means they're pronouncing the R?
There's really no such thing as correct pronunciation in English, local variations are too strong.
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I say aamond, with the stress on the first syllable. When some people have written their pronunciation as armond I wonder if this means they're pronouncing the R?
There's really no such thing as correct pronunciation in English, local variations are too strong.
I always say always, possibly because it's physically easier to keep the L sound before a W than before an M. But it's not a decision I've made myself, just one I was brought up with.
Then again my mum said shee for ski, which is presumably the Norwegian pronunciation, but I've changed that one of my own accord; others may have done the same, as with many foreign words coming into the language.
Then again my mum said shee for ski, which is presumably the Norwegian pronunciation, but I've changed that one of my own accord; others may have done the same, as with many foreign words coming into the language.
I realize it's a bit late to come in on this, and probably nobody will ever read this, but the whole controversy reminds me of the unforgettable moment at a Sussex school when I suddenly realized some people did (do) not pronounce CALM and HARM (more or less) identically! For me they sounded like KAHM and HAHM the way most southerners at least pronounce them. Is there something wrong with my ears? The traces of the L and R in the spelling for me are still negligible. I'm passing no judg(e)ment, that's just the way I hear them. Doesn't apply of course if it happens to be a Scot(-sman) speaking, say...................
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