'Read' and its past tense are spelled the same. How should they be spelled?
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what if we just change the past tense to red? simpler?
Make it
redd
, to easily distinguish from the color. -
Make it
redd
, to easily distinguish from the color.wrote last edited by [email protected]The irony with using Connect is that the text for "redd" being done in code format makes it red.
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On a different note there is Reading, a football club in UK, which is pronounced "Redding". This pronunciation is akin to the Reading Railroad from Monopoly (which I mispronounced all my life until today).
Little details, picked up along the way.
It's pronounced "Redding" Railroad?? All those times I sang "Take a look, it's in a book, Reading Railroad!" were a lie!
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what if we just change the past tense to red? simpler?
People already struggle with 'led' being the past tense of "lead". It seems like quite a few people extend the "read/read" rule to "lead".
In other words, I don't know if that would actually solve anything
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Except that "gh" is never pronounced "f" at the start of a word and "ti" is never "sh" at the end. The "o" is perfectly correct, though. Phosh.
Of course. But it does illustrate some of the confusing quirks of the language though.
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What about similar oddities in English?
(This question is inspired by this comic by https://www.exocomics.com/) (I couldn't find the link to the actual comic)
Edit: it's to its in the title. Damn autocorrect.The digraph oo is pronounced at least six different ways:
- boot, proof, boost, scoop, moon
- book, foot, look, cookie, good
- floor, poor, door, moor
- flood, blood
- zoology, cooperative
- brooch (just brooch; there doesn't seem to be any other word in the whole language using this sound for oo).
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What about similar oddities in English?
(This question is inspired by this comic by https://www.exocomics.com/) (I couldn't find the link to the actual comic)
Edit: it's to its in the title. Damn autocorrect.FaƧade is written using a letter that doesn't appear in English language keyboards (or in any other English word that I'm aware of).
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You pronounce the middle syllable as "me"?
Par-meh-sawn
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The digraph oo is pronounced at least six different ways:
- boot, proof, boost, scoop, moon
- book, foot, look, cookie, good
- floor, poor, door, moor
- flood, blood
- zoology, cooperative
- brooch (just brooch; there doesn't seem to be any other word in the whole language using this sound for oo).
Brooch and mooch.
But, aren't these the same sounds as boot / proof / boost etc.?
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Ah, thanks for the reminder to look through some TNG again. Data is such a great character and fills the role of the outsider looking in perfectly.
Plus he's a sex toy, which is cool. If peak Denise Crosby wanted to find out if I was fully functional, I might bust a hydraulic hose right there.
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FaƧade is written using a letter that doesn't appear in English language keyboards (or in any other English word that I'm aware of).
one would say that word is a
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Brooch and mooch.
But, aren't these the same sounds as boot / proof / boost etc.?
Brooch is pronounced like roach
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FaƧade is written using a letter that doesn't appear in English language keyboards (or in any other English word that I'm aware of).
Just like naĆÆve
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FaƧade is written using a letter that doesn't appear in English language keyboards (or in any other English word that I'm aware of).
Using loan words is cheating, but also disqualifies half the English language
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The digraph oo is pronounced at least six different ways:
- boot, proof, boost, scoop, moon
- book, foot, look, cookie, good
- floor, poor, door, moor
- flood, blood
- zoology, cooperative
- brooch (just brooch; there doesn't seem to be any other word in the whole language using this sound for oo).
Are the first 2 lines really different?
Genuine question from a non native speaker.
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Are the first 2 lines really different?
Genuine question from a non native speaker.
first line is a long oo, second line is a short oo.
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first line is a long oo, second line is a short oo.
Oh I see it now. Thanks for the explanation
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Are the first 2 lines really different?
Genuine question from a non native speaker.
That's the fun part, depending on your dialect and regional accent, sometimes there is no discernable difference in some of these lines. But each line has distinct pronunciation from each other in some dialects.
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That's the fun part, depending on your dialect and regional accent, sometimes there is no discernable difference in some of these lines. But each line has distinct pronunciation from each other in some dialects.
Yeah I went through them again and see how it makes a slight difference but I am slavic and you can definitely hear it when I speak especially with my þ, ð and r sounds. The r especially after speaking for more than 15 minutees my tongue just gives up and I cannot make the weird soft english version of it. The probounciations I use are all over the place.
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What about similar oddities in English?
(This question is inspired by this comic by https://www.exocomics.com/) (I couldn't find the link to the actual comic)
Edit: it's to its in the title. Damn autocorrect.The comedic timing of this strip is actually really good.