J
Jhym
Guest
Can I get a heel?


This, a thousand times this!There's also the "could care less" instead of "couldn't care less". How can you be in such a mental distress that in order to say your care-o-meter is at the minimum and can't be below, you say "I could care less"?
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Interesting (or not) linguistic fact: the "t" sound that some people make in "congratulations" and the "d" sound that some people make in "congratulations" are in fact the same phonetic sound -- the only difference is that the "d" is voiced (makes your larynx vibrate) and the "t" is unvoiced (doesn't). In most languages, unvoiced consonant sounds between two voiced sounds become voiced -- vowels are always voiced, so the "t" between the "a" and the "u" will, under "normal" voicing rules, become the voiced "d" that annoys you.Pet peeve: Congradulations
Where did the "d" come from? How? I even HEAR people say it with a "d"!
I suppose that's like mistakenly referring to a lua as a luaau. Erm, um uh... no thank you I'll pass.Oooh yea, had my previously mentioned English teacher mark a correct "lose" wrong and corrected it with "loose," which I had to counter-correct with "lose."
"Loose" and "Lose?" that's easy, who'd confuse "luo" for "leipo"? rolleyes:
(^^ No, you're not supposed to get it)
This is how my hubby and I pronounce it, like you do.Hubby and I have always assumed 'lich' = "litch". However, someone told me it was "leeshe"... but surely to be pronounced that way it would be spelled 'liche' not 'lich'...?
This one makes me crazy! I work with plumbers ... who insist that in the winter they dethaw pipes. Frequently I say "So you re-froze their pipes for them?" Because, if you undoing (de-) the thaw then you must be freezing it!Okay - my mother likes to "dethaw" food in the microwave. Now I know some online dictionaries say it is now acceptable, but I don't buy it. She really means thaw or defrost.
If you say it right, you do vocalize the TInteresting (or not) linguistic fact: the "t" sound that some people make in "congratulations" and the "d" sound that some people make in "congratulations" are in fact the same phonetic sound -- the only difference is that the "d" is voiced (makes your larynx vibrate) and the "t" is unvoiced (doesn't). In most languages, unvoiced consonant sounds between two voiced sounds become voiced -- vowels are always voiced, so the "t" between the "a" and the "u" will, under "normal" voicing rules, become the voiced "d" that annoys you.People who say it with a "t" are really kinda just going out of their way to pronounce it the way it's spelled.
Not sure what the case is specifically with the "t" in congratulations, but oftentimes letters that look out of place indicate archaic pronounciations or phonetic values that no longer exist. Case in point: "knight". Ye olde pronounciation: "kuh-ni-k-t".If you say it right, you do vocalize the T(as well as the U that follows it). I am an enunciation demon ... ask my kids. They didnt just randomly put those letters there! Unless it is a "silent" rule, you are supposed to say the dang thing!