mikkeneko:

randomslasher:

It’s a phenomenon unofficially known as “reader’s accent” and it’s very...

mikkeneko:



randomslasher:



It’s a phenomenon unofficially known as “reader’s accent” and it’s very common! Because English has so many words (in fact considered to be the language with the greatest number of words) lots of people, and in particular those who read a lot as children, will encounter a word in writing long before they hear it spoken. They’ll develop the idea of what the word will sound like in their head, and only realize when they hear it spoken that their idea was different than the common pronunciation. 


I’ve even had it where I’ve known words as spoken words, and I’ve known words as written words, and it’s taken me a significant amount of time to realize that they were the same word. One example I can think of is the word indictment. I always thought “indictment” was pronounced “in-dict-ment,” and it was only when all these police indictments started happening on the news (with the news crawls below the words being spoken) that I realized it was “in-DITE-ment.” 


So yeah, never feel bad for discovering that a word in English is pronounced differently than you would’ve expected. English has had influence from SO many other languages over the centuries as it developed, and as a result, many of our pronunciation “guidelines” are borrowed from the languages the words originally came from. It’s massively inconsistent, and it’s one of the reasons that learning English as a second language is so difficult. 


As my favorite poster in the campus writing center used to proclaim: 


“English: A language that lurks in dark alleyways, beats up other languages, and rifles through their pockets for spare vocabulary.” 


the-inverted-langblr:



it’s okay native speakers have exactly the same experience


geschiedenis-en-talen:


You will not believe the amount of times I’ve read an English word and thought of a pronunciation and then continued to pronounce the word that way in my head for years only to discover that it has a completely different pronunciation and I would’ve made a fool of myself if I had ever pronounced that word out loud




it wasn’t until an adult that I realized that colonel and spoken word “kernal” were the same word



I would like to thank my Navy friend Eli for telling me about Forecastles and Gunwales. He also advised on Navy stuff in all three books.

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Published on January 06, 2020 08:15
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