A (letter): Difference between revisions
imported>Ro Thorpe |
imported>Ro Thorpe |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|au pãir | |au pãir | ||
|*ô pãir | |*ô-pãir | ||
|- | |- | ||
|Austrâlia | |Austrâlia | ||
Line 33: | Line 33: | ||
|bureaucracy | |bureaucracy | ||
|*byurócrəcy | |*byurócrəcy | ||
|- | |||
|because | |||
|*bicóz | |||
|- | |||
|blancmange | |||
|*bləmónzh | |||
|- | |||
|faux-pàs | |||
|*fô-pà | |||
|} | |} | ||
gauche *gôsh | gauche *gôsh | ||
laureate *lóriət | laureate *lóriət |
Revision as of 10:19, 6 March 2008
A is the first letter of the English alphabet. Its name is pronounced like the strong form of the indefinite article a. Eh? has the same sound.
Use in English
Examples (the accents show stress and pronunciation: see English phonemes):
A list of irregular a’s:
spelling | pronunciation |
---|---|
again | *əgén |
against | *əgénst |
any | *énny |
au pãir | *ô-pãir |
Austrâlia | *Ostrâlia |
Austria | *Óstria |
bûreau | *byûrô |
bureaucracy | *byurócrəcy |
because | *bicóz |
blancmange | *bləmónzh |
faux-pàs | *fô-pà |
gauche *gôsh
laureate *lóriət
laurel *lórrəl
Laurie name lórry vehicle
Lawrence or Laurence *Lórrənce
many *ménny
Maurice (BrE) first name Mórris surname
mauve *môav (move is pronounced *moôve)
pláteau *plátô
said *séd
says *séz
tábleau *táblô
Thames *Témz
Vauxhåll *Vóxåll
yacht *yót
In -able, a is schwa: êatable (cf. édible) pálatable, breâkable, repêatable, thínkable, dispénsable, màrketable, remàrkable, nôtable, unrelîable, pálpable, vîable. A final silent -e is retained before -able if it aids pronunciation: mánageable (*mánajable, not *mánagable), sâleable (*sâlable, not *sállable).
Compare -ible, i also normally pronounced schwa: respónsible (*responsable is French), sénsible, póssible, édible, convërtible, suscéptible.
-(ic)al, and -(ic)le are identically pronounced. -le is for nouns and -al for adjectives.
Adjectives: mûsical, clássical, nåutical, quízzical, pênal, feûdal, rûral, nátural, mâniácal.
Nouns: pàrticle, fóllicle, îcicle, pébble, míddle, púddle, múddle (which is also a verb).
Of course there are exceptions: pédal bicycle = péddle sell, líttle (adjective or noun), befúddle (verb), óbstacle, bàrnacle which many speakers pronounce -ícle.
-ant is a common suffix which has the schwa sound. In some words it is French for -ing and has this meaning, and it is rather less common than -ent: relúctant, redúndant, pétulant, mŏrdant, triúmphant (î), péndant, érrant, mílitant, élephant, élegant, árrogant, ascéndant, depéndant noun (cf. depéndent adjective), árrant, érrant, and cúrrant has the a when it means the fruit, and not, as one might expect, ‘at this time’: cúrrant eat = cúrrent now.
-ance/-ancy or -ence: as with -ant, and -ent: pétulance, redúndancy, élegance, mŏrdancy; éssence, depéndence, correspóndence, ínsolence, rédolence.
The suffix is -ment, not -mant; but of course -ant can be added to -m: clâimant, dŏrmant.
The suffix -age is pronounced -íj by most speakers: ímage, víllage, píllage, spíllage, wattage, cóttage. Exceptions are: míràge (*míràzh), gáràge (BrE *gáràj; AmE *gəràzh). Similarly with the a in térrace (*térris), ménace (*ménnis, cf. ténnis), and Hórace (*Hórris, cf. Nórris, Dóris, Bóris) – though these can all be schwa.
The suffix -ate is pronounced -âte in verbs: éstimâte, séparâte, prédicâte, delíberâte, artículâte, célebrâte, dénigrâte, eláborâte, precípitâte, régulâte. (This ending is spelt differently in wâit, bâit and gâit - that is to say, only in some monosyllables.) But schwa in nouns and adjectives: laureate (ló-), célibate, éstimate, séparate, prédicate, delíberate, artículate, eláborate, precípitate - all, when not verbs, -ət.
a is redundant in ëarly, ëarth, dëarth, rehëarse, hëard, lëarn, yëarn, pëarl (cf. heàrt, heàrth, rehëarse) and in Latin and Greek aê: nébulaê, nôvaê, fŏrmulaê, currículum vìtaê, Aêschylus (*êeskiləss).
Unstressed in aesthétics BrE aê can sound like í in ít, while in AmE the spelling can be esthétics, and both e’s are pronounced with the é sound.
As âe this combination is rare: Gâelic Ireland (Gáelic Scotland), Ísrâel (cf. Mîchael, where it is unstressed: *Mŷcle), mâelstrom, phâeton (*fâytən), Râe surname (= Rây Raymond, rây light), while Grâeme is pronounced exactly like its more common variant Grâham (*Grâyəm).
a is redundant in some Scottish names: Líndsay, Múrray surname = Mòray Firth cf. Welsh Ánglesey, Manx Rámsey.
And it is redundant in BrE, for most speakers, in words where the suffix -ary is preceded by an unstressed syllable: díctionary, suppleméntary, sécondary, nécessary compliméntary praise = compleméntary together.
In names beginning with Mc- and Mac-, the a, visible or not, is pronounced schwa, except in a few cases, like McEnroe, where, though invisible, it is the main stressed vowel.