More Mispronounced Words: Part 4 – S Through Z
This post wraps up our series on commonly mispronounced words. See the other posts in the series: Part 1 , Part 2, and Part 3.
Commonly mispronounced words: S through Z (actually U)
Salmon — The L is silent.
Salon — Not the same as saloon; and the second syllable is accented—it’s French.
Sherbet — Has only one R. It isn’t sherbert.
Silicon — Not to be pronounced like silicone. Even more like sili-cn, rather than silikon.
Status — I did not know this, but the preferred pronunciation is with a long A: stay-tus.
Suite — Pronounced sweet, not suit.
Supremacist — It is not supremist.
Supposedly — It is not supposably, even if that rolls off the tongue more easily.
Tenet — Not the same as tenant. Tenet is a law or rule; tenant—well, you know what that is.
Take for Granted — Don’t get sloppy (I know you wouldn’t) and say take for granite.
Transient — Has only two syllables, not three. Tran-junt.
Triathlon — Has only one A. Not triathalon.
Undoubtably — It’s undoubtedly.
Come visit me at the Sonoma County Fair! I will be displaying and selling my books with other local authors from Redwood Writers. I will be there from 10:30 to 5:30 on Saturday, August 4; Sunday, August 5; and Friday, August 10. We are in the Kraft Building, Santa Rosa Fairgrounds.
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Now available for preorder on Kindle (or, if you would prefer, Kobo, iBooks and Nook).
Includes standards for using all the punctuation marks: periods, question marks, exclamation points, quotation marks, italics, semicolons, colons, parentheses, brackets, hyphens, dashes, apostrophes, ellipses, and, of course, commas. Also includes quizzes, an answer key, a glossary of grammar terms used in the book, lots of examples, an index. and a comma quick reference guide.


