Wählen Sie aus verschiedenen Englisch Lehrkräften für ...
Ryota
I don’t really understand how chunks of “phonetic respelling” works. Looking into “every” on the dictionary, phonetic respelling is written “ev-ree”. Here, I don’t understand why not it’s “ever-ee”.
Is there some rule of creating chunks of phonetic respelling?
31. Jan. 2024 17:15
Antworten · 6
3
This is a case of elision. Commonly, an unstressed vowel between two syllables is elided and the word is resyllabized. For example, every [e.ve.ri] with three syllables becomes evry [ev.ri] with two syllables).
A few examples from the online Collins Dictionary web site.
every (pronounced as evry [IPA evri])
family (pronounced as family or famly [IPA ˈfæmɪlɪ or ˈfæmlɪ])
laboratory (pronounced as labratory [IPA læbrətɔːri (US)])
medicine (pronounced as medcin [IPA medsən])
31. Januar 2024
2
Some people do say every as ever-ee but it’s most commonly pronounced as ev-ree ☺️ hope this helps
1. Februar 2024
1
Phonetic respelling is usually done casually. It's invented as it is written. It isn't consistent or scientific. The consistent, scientific way is to use the international phonetic alphabet. I need to learn it!
If I turn "ev-ree" back into sound, I get two syllables. If I turn "ever-ee" back into sound, I get three syllables. The normal pronunciation is the two-syllable form. The second "e" is silent.
Rarely, you will hear someone say it is "ever-ree," but this is very unusual, it's not in the dictionaries I've checked, and it is done for purposes of emphasis.
If someone says "Do it every day, and I mean EVERY SINGLE DAY," the first "every" might be pronounced "ev'ry" and the second as "EV-uh-REE."
1. Februar 2024
No two people talk alike. There is no “ correct” or “standard” amount of elision to use. Imitate people who speak in a manner that you enjoy hearing.
31. Januar 2024
"every", like "very" is a two-syllabic word, first syllable stressed.
31. Januar 2024
Mehr anzeigen
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!
Ryota
Sprachfähigkeiten
Englisch, Japanisch
Lernsprache
Englisch
Artikel, die Ihnen gefallen könnten

Santa, St. Nicholas, or Father Christmas? How Christmas Varies Across English-Speaking Countries
3 positive Bewertungen · 0 Kommentare

Reflecting on Your Progress: Year-End Language Journal Prompts
1 positive Bewertungen · 0 Kommentare

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
25 positive Bewertungen · 17 Kommentare
Weitere Artikel
