Contour v Contor

Contour v Contor

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Joined
18 Jan 07
Moves
12473
12 Mar 23

@moonbus said
Oh, well, in that case ....

Why do the British insist on pronouncing 'schedule' SHedule, without the 'c', but they pronounce 'school', 'scholar', and 'schooner' with the 'c'? Go figure.
Soft and hard vowels. Come on, that's easy. Same reason the Italians do it.

Now explain why, in German, "st" and "sp" get an extra "j" inserted, but "sn" and "sl" do not... and why, in the latter case, you spell "j" as "ch", but in any other context, you pronounce "ch" more-or-less correctly!?

Joined
18 Jan 07
Moves
12473
12 Mar 23

@yo-its-me said
I suspect either early Americas couldn't be bothered to spell things the English way, or they purposefully tried to break away from the English and make something that separated them.
This. This is the very reason. It's all Webster's fault, and it's all just sour colonial grapes.

Joined
18 Jan 07
Moves
12473
12 Mar 23

@moonbus said
Please pronounce the word "ghoti."
I'll give you all a hint: it's pronounced 'fish.'
Cute, but as thousands of people have pointed out already, in spelling, context is everything, and the joke is growing stale, Munberti.

Joined
14 Mar 04
Moves
177343
12 Mar 23

@shallow-blue said
This. This is the very reason. It's all Webster's fault, and it's all just sour colonial grapes.
Tea, shmee, let them drink bourbon.👍

Joined
18 Jan 07
Moves
12473
12 Mar 23

@indonesia-phil said
He had eaten steak for breakfast....Phonetically he had eeten stake for brekfast, there's three versions of 'ea' before you've even really woken up.
Phonetically, he had [ i:t@n ste:k ]. No sane language pronounces ee as [ i: ] or a as [ e: ]. No sane language.