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M.Jafar Mash
How do you read "i.e." and "e.g." out loud?
While reading a text out loud, or speaking about something, you may come across these abbreviations: "e.g. = for example" and "i.e. = I mean/it is (rephrasing, or narrowing down the topic)"
So how do native speakers pronounce them? Do they pronounce them like ee-gee and eye-ee or they say "for example" and "it is"? Or they pronounce them in another way?
Apr 4, 2017 12:36 PM
Answers · 3
2
I don't use "e.g." much in conversation (it's just as easy to say "for example"), but yes, we would tend to pronounce the acronym "ee-gee" and "eye-ee". For "i.e.", I would tend to say "in other words..." instead of "it is".
April 4, 2017
1
If I'm reading out loud, I'll likely say either "eye -ee" and "ee-gee" or "id est" and "exempli gratia."
If I'm speaking, I'll just say "for example" or "that is." Those are written things - almost never spoken.
April 4, 2017
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M.Jafar Mash
Language Skills
English, Persian (Farsi)
Learning Language
English
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