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How do you pronounce the "ed" in "USED" So the rules are if the word ends with: v b g ð z dʒ m n ŋ l ɹ dipthong It is pronounced as " d" but in the dictionary, "used" is pronounced as /juːst/, which is a "t' https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/used
Apr 8, 2019 3:35 PM
Answers · 2
6
The Cambridge dictionary entry is incomplete because it only addresses "used to." The basic rule is that after an unvoiced consonant, -ed is pronounced [t] and after a voiced consonant or a vowel, -ed is pronounced as [d]. Thus "used" is normally pronounced [juzd] as in the phrase "I used a hammer." However, in the expression "used to do," the [zd] sounds before "to" change their pronounciation to [st]. Thus "used to" is not pronounced as [juzdtoʊ] but instead as [justtoʊ] as in the phrase "I used to have a car." When said normally, [justtoʊ] reduces to [justoʊ]. A similar change occurs for "have to do." Thus "have" is pronounced [hæv] in "I have a car" and [hæf] in "I have to take the car to work."
April 8, 2019
pronounces as something like "use der" as a single sound.
July 2, 2019
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