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Standard American pronunciation on "happy"
Do all the Americans pronounce "happy" actually as \ ˈhabē \ instead of \ ˈhapē \? Or, some of the Americans still say \ ˈhapē \ like Brits? It seems that the sound is changed from "p" to "b".
The online dictionary Merriam-Webster posts \ ˈhapē \. But, one clicks on the icon of pronunciation, one would hear it pronounce \ ˈhabē \. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/happy
It's the same from the Cambridge dictionary online on American pronunciation. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english-chinese-traditional/happy.
In particular, a professor who teaches phonetics in university pronounces \ ˈhabē \. Please check out the link at 23:07
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlaSveXhsHE
Jan 19, 2019 4:24 AM
Answers · 2
1
Hi! I'm American, and I've only ever heard happy pronounced as "hapē". The "p" sound might not be pronounced as strongly as in Britain, but it is still a "p" sound. :)
January 19, 2019
I think the dialect can vary depending on where someone is from. Most Americans would say haPE.
January 19, 2019
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Elearner
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English
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English
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