English is Tough
Stuff
We've all cursed written English
as capricious and sentenced American Pronunciation Rules as but
half-truths at best. Examples and practice always seem better than
studying worn and obsolete phonetic guides so try your luck at a
verse or two of these...
(read aloud, with a
friend!)
...multi-national personnel at
North Atlantic Treaty Organization headquarters near Paris found
English to be an easy language ... until they tried to pronounce it.
To help them discard an array of accents, the verses below were
devised. After trying them, a Frenchman said he'd prefer six months
at hard labor to reading six lines aloud. Try them
yourself.
The Chaos
- Dearest creature in
creation,
- Study English
pronunciation.
- I will teach you in my
verse
- Sounds like corpse, corps,
horse, and worse.
- I will keep you, Suzy,
busy,
- Make your head with heat grow
dizzy.
- Tear in eye, your dress will
tear.
- So shall I! Oh hear my
prayer.
-
- Just compare heart, beard,
and heard,
- Dies and diet, lord and
word,
- Sword and sward, retain and
Britain.
- (Mind the latter, how it's
written.)
- Now I surely will not plague
you
- With such words as plaque and
ague.
- But be careful how you
speak:
- Say break and steak, but
bleak and streak;
- Cloven, oven, how and
low,
- Script, receipt, show, poem,
and toe.
-
- Hear me say, devoid of
trickery,
- Daughter, laughter, and
Terpsichore,
- Typhoid, measles, topsails,
aisles,
- Exiles, similes, and
reviles;
- Scholar, vicar, and
cigar,
- Solar, mica, war and
far;
- One, anemone,
Balmoral,
- Kitchen, lichen, laundry,
laurel;
- Gertrude, German, wind and
mind,
- Scene, Melpomene,
mankind.
-
- Billet does not rhyme with
ballet,
- Bouquet, wallet, mallet,
chalet.
- Blood and flood are not like
food,
- Nor is mould like should and
would.
- Viscous, viscount, load and
broad,
- Toward, to forward, to
reward.
- And your pronunciation's
OK
- When you correctly say
croquet,
- Rounded, wounded, grieve and
sieve,
- Friend and fiend, alive and
live.
-
- Ivy, privy, famous;
clamour
- And enamour rhyme with
hammer.
- River, rival, tomb, bomb,
comb,
- Doll and roll and some and
home.
- Stranger does not rhyme with
anger,
- Neither does devour with
clangour.
- Souls but foul, haunt but
aunt,
- Font, front, wont, want,
grand, and grant,
- Shoes, goes, does. Now first
say finger,
- And then singer, ginger,
linger,
- Real, zeal, mauve, gauze,
gouge and gauge,
- Marriage, foliage, mirage,
and age.
-
- Query does not rhyme with
very,
- Nor does fury sound like
bury.
- Dost, lost, post and doth,
cloth, loth.
- Job, nob, bosom, transom,
oath.
- Though the differences seem
little,
- We say actual but
victual.
- Refer does not rhyme with
deafer.
- Feoffer does, and zephyr,
heifer.
- Mint, pint, senate and
sedate;
- Dull, bull, and George ate
late.
- Scenic, Arabic,
Pacific,
- Science, conscience,
scientific.
-
- Liberty, library, heave and
heaven,
- Rachel, ache, moustache,
eleven.
- We say hallowed, but
allowed,
- People, leopard, towed, but
vowed.
- Mark the differences,
moreover,
- Between mover, cover,
clover;
- Leeches, breeches, wise,
precise,
- Chalice, but police and
lice;
- Camel, constable,
unstable,
- Principle, disciple,
label.
-
- Petal, panel, and
canal,
- Wait, surprise, plait,
promise, pal.
- Worm and storm, chaise,
chaos, chair,
- Senator, spectator,
mayor.
- Tour, but our and succour,
four.
- Gas, alas, and
Arkansas.
- Sea, idea, Korea,
area,
- Psalm, Maria, but
malaria.
- Youth, south, southern,
cleanse and clean.
- Doctrine, turpentine,
marine.
-
- Compare alien with
Italian,
- Dandelion and
battalion.
- Sally with ally, yea,
ye,
- Eye, I, ay, aye, whey, and
key.
- Say aver, but ever,
fever,
- Neither, leisure, skein,
deceiver.
- Heron, granary,
canary.
- Crevice and device and
aerie.
-
- Face, but preface, not
efface.
- Phlegm, phlegmatic, ass,
glass, bass.
- Large, but target, gin, give,
verging,
- Ought, out, joust and scour,
scourging.
- Ear, but earn and wear and
tear
- Do not rhyme with here but
ere.
- Seven is right, but so is
even,
- Hyphen, roughen, nephew
Stephen,
- Monkey, donkey, Turk and
jerk,
- Ask, grasp, wasp, and cork
and work.
-
- Pronunciation -- think of
Psyche!
- Is a paling stout and
spikey?
- Won't it make you lose your
wits,
- Writing groats and saying
grits?
- It's a dark abyss or
tunnel:
- Strewn with stones, stowed,
solace, gunwale,
- Islington and Isle of
Wight,
- Housewife, verdict and
indict.
-
- Finally, which rhymes with
enough --
- Though, through, plough, or
dough, or cough?
- Hiccough has the sound of
cup.
- My advice is to give
up!!!
Dr. Gerald Nolst Trenite
(1870-1946), a Dutch observer of English.
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