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List of words of disputed pronunciation

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The following is a list of words and names which are often pronounced by native speakers of the English language in ways which many others consider to be incorrect. In some cases, speakers disagree on how to pronounce borrowed foreign words; in other cases, the dispute arises from the effect of spelling on a word not pronounced as it is spelled. Many heated arguments are disagreements between the residents of a place and outsiders on how to pronounce the name of a place.

Notes: 'AHD' is the American Heritage Dictionary. 'M-W' is the Merriam-Webster Dictionary (American). 'K&K' is A Pronouncing Dictionary of American English by John S. Kenyon and Thomas A. Knott. 'OED' is the Oxford English Dictionary. 'EEPD' is Everyman's English Pronouncing Dictionary by Daniel Jones (revised by A. C. Gimson, 14th edn., 1977), which focuses on RP. 'LPD' is the Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (1st edn., 1990) by John C. Wells, which provides both RP and General American (GenAm) pronunciations. 'MQD' is the Macquarie Dictionary (Australian). Some data come from the 1998 [LPD pronunciation preference poll] of British speakers; this is indicated by PPP below.

The pronunciations below are displayed in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). See International Phonetic Alphabet for English for information on how to decipher the different phonetic symbols.

Some pronunciations are subdivided into (a) GenAm (rhotic, no trap-bath split, and the father-bother merger) and (b) RP (nonrhotic, with trap-bath split and no father-bother merger). The differences between (a) and (b) forms are generally not the differences under discussion.

GenAm pronunciations are given first in these cases for consistency. This does not imply that GenAm pronunciations are preferred or are the local pronunciation in the case of place names.

The diphthong [oʊ] is to be interpreted as [əʊ] in RP (thus no and know would be transcribed as [noʊ], which means [nəʊ] in RP and [noʊ] in GenAm).

A dot [.] means a syllable boundary: for example, windy ['wɪnd.i] (two syllables: ['wɪnd-] and [-i]); the dot may be omitted where a stress mark, [ˈ or ˌ], occurs: thus [æbˈdoʊm.ən] (one pronunciation of abdomen) has three syllables, the first being [æb-]. It should also be noticed that "the question of syllabification in English is controversial: different phoneticians hold very different views about it" (John C. Wells): for instance, Roach and Hartman give for windy a syllabification ['wɪn.di].

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"For golf [gɒlf] is generally heard in southern English, but many who play the game say [gɒf] or [gɔːf], modifications of the Scotch forms of the word, [gɔʊf], [gaʊf]; an older spelling is gowf" (W. Ripman, English phonetics and Specimens of English, London, [1933]). LPD gives, for British English (RP), 1(b) as the standard pronunciation, with 3(b) and 4 as variants (furthermore, [gəʊlf] as a British English, but non-RP form); only [gɑːlf] and [gɔːlf] for American English (General American).

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