- 2,050
- 614
Sorry! said:How's that make a difference in how the word is pronounced? women = wimen?
Yes.
Edit: Actually it's more like "wimin"
Sorry! said:How's that make a difference in how the word is pronounced? women = wimen?
lisab said:Yes.
Edit: Actually it's more like "wimin"
Sorry! said:lol who says WOMen like WIMIN that's weird.
Tobias Funke said:He wrote women, not woman.
Sorry! said:How's that make a difference in how the word is pronounced? women = wimen?
Sorry! said:yeah one is WO-Man and the other is WO-men do you pronounce men as min?
'There are some great looking min over there.'
haha what?
lisab said:Yes! In the word "women" the "men" is pronounced "min," but the word "men" is pronounced "men."
It's not logical; it's English. Which, I presume, is why the OP hates it.
"Men" and "min" would be pronounced the same way. Unless you pronounce "men" with the "e" sounding like the "e" in "egg".Yes ! In the word "women" the "men" is pronounced "min," but the word "men" is pronounced "men."
The English pronounce words funny. Like Aluminum. They say al-oo-min-ee-um. It's not even spelled that way. There would have to be an "I" before the last "U" for that to be a legitimate pronunciation. But I guess they put the I there to compensate.What about mischievous this one to me sounds like 'mis-chiev-ous' I hear people say 'mis-cheev-eee-ous' ha.
It's interesting to see how other people pronounce words though :P
Women is pronounced like "whimin."I've been sitting here saying the word women and it sounds to me like I'm saying 'w-uh-mmm-en' (as in end) and when I say woman it's more like 'w-uh-mmm-an' (as in and).
leroyjenkens said:The English pronounce words funny. Like Aluminum. They say al-oo-min-ee-um. It's not even spelled that way. There would have to be an "I" before the last "U" for that to be a legitimate pronunciation.
Kurdt said:There is in a real english dictionary.![]()
i think you mean this thread wouldn't exist if he DID know rhat,. if he DIDNt know that the thread would and DID exist, as seen in the op, where he incorrectly states that ''soceity'' does not meet the i before e rule!Tobias Funke said:He wrote women, not woman.
This thread wouldn't exist if he didn't know that.
sportsstar469 said:i think you mean this thread wouldn't exist if he DID know rhat,. if he DIDNt know that the thread would and DID exist, as seen in the op, where he incorrectly states that ''soceity'' does not meet the i before e rule!
Moonbear said:I actually view it as the opposite. As long as spelling is reasonably close, I can usually read quickly over some typos or misspellings. When grammar and punctuation are discarded, it takes a lot more time to read and process what something says, and leaves a lot of room for misinterpretation. I also don't think the shift key is all that hard to reach for on a keyboard.
Sorry! said:Ok people keep saying this in this thread. How does society follow 'i before except after c'?
I am quite sure its so-c-i-e-ty. So according to the rule it should be spelt so-c-e-i-ty. Because I should not come before e since it is after
I got them off a list of homophones. You people must have weird accents.Moonbear said:I just HAVE to hear your accent. Those are not pronounced at all alike where I'm from.The first would be more like rawt.
leroyjenkens said:I edited my post. I didn't think that they would most likely have a different spelling too.
sportsstar469 said:i think you mean this thread wouldn't exist if he DID know rhat,. if he DIDNt know that the thread would and DID exist, as seen in the op, where he incorrectly states that ''soceity'' does not meet the i before e rule!
mgb_phys said:The official IUPAC spelling is now Aluminium, unfortunately they also insist on spelling Sulpher as Sulfur.
Tobias Funke said:He meant to spell the words incorrectly to show what they should be if they followed the "rules". Although he spelled foreigner correctly, which makes it a little confusing.
At least that's how I interpret it. Maybe he did mean to spell them both right. I don't know.
Sorry! said:Hahaha. That's SO weird, to me it's still 'men' in wo-men.
I wonder do you guys also pronounce 'cavalry and calvary' the same way?
What about mischievous this one to me sounds like 'mis-chiev-ous' I hear people say 'mis-cheev-eee-ous' ha.
It's interesting to see how other people pronounce words though :P
EDIT: I've been sitting here saying the word women and it sounds to me like I'm saying 'w-uh-mmm-en' (as in end) and when I say woman it's more like 'w-uh-mmm-an' (as in and).I looked it up in the dictionary and it says \ˈwi-mən\
Equate said:Look, this guy is Canadian, too, he can teach you.![]()
mgb_phys said:But if the word comes from a language that's hard to pronounce - like French then keep the spelling but pronounce it in English.
lisab said:Yes! In the word "women" the "men" is pronounced "min," but the word "men" is pronounced "men."
It's not logical; it's English. Which, I presume, is why the OP hates it.
Moonbear said:I pronounce it wi-men.
"Wimmin" makes me think of redneck English (sorry lisa) and a joke my grandparents had on their bar. It was a plaque thing shaped like a tombstone and read:
Ma loved pa.
Pa loved wimmin.
Ma caught pa with two in swimmin.
Here lies pa.
Equate said:Look, this guy is Canadian, too, he can teach you.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/B4MIrKXaD84&hl=en_US&fs=1&"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/B4MIrKXaD84&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>