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Damn It! I can't ever seem to say/spell that word!!

MPAsquared

www.musemassagespa.com
Do you have a word or 2 you always screw up? Can't seem to pronounce or spell it right?

Mine are:

1. Cinnamon - ciminmin, cinnimin, sinamon, cinninimimin, blah!

2. Anomoly - anonaly, anomonaly, enominaly, whatever lol!

3. Statistic - stastistic, stastisctic, stasstistic, Fml!
 

red

you must be fk'n kid'g me
Nov 13, 2001
17,572
8
38
Yes I can't say alligator, luckily it doesn't come up very often
 

Celticman

Into Ties and Tail
Aug 13, 2009
8,916
87
48
Durham & Toronto
Can never pronounce MPAsquared. I wish her name was Mary. Or Jane.
 

Marla

Active member
Mar 29, 2010
1,563
12
38
60
ajax
Most people say nucular instead of nuclear. Inpite of instead of despite and there are a ton more.
 

gcostanza

Well-known member
Jul 24, 2010
7,818
528
113
I have trouble pronouncing 'Philadelphia'.
 

asuran

Tamil and proud
May 12, 2014
3,063
411
83
Ottawa
For me, off the top of my head I'm thinking of these two:

Necessary (Tho usually i correct myself, I hesitate when I write this, I question myself if i had mixed up the positions of the soft 'c' and the 's' at times)
Unequivocally (I stumble pronouncing this as well, pronounce it as 'unequivacly')
 

Mr Bret

Well-known member
Aug 13, 2012
5,461
939
113
Spelling words that are similar in French and English.
One of the disadvantages of being bilingual is that sometimes the wrong version pops up, and it's worse when you have a French keyboard.

One example is address vs adresse.
Usually once I see it typed out, I see the mistake.

One word a number of my friends have a hard time saying is alimony. It has nothing to do with the spelling or pronunciation, but they just always seem to choke on it. :frusty:
 

jcpro

Well-known member
Jan 31, 2014
24,673
6,840
113
Permanent-permament
Stop the "short period of time" madness.
 

spraggamuffin

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2006
3,296
160
63
Many words with double letters like .

Massachusetts is hard for me to pronounce .

Words like Caribbean,beginning, accomodation etc can be hard to spell where sometimes you are not sure whether it's the r's or the b's, C's or the m's that should be double, or whether it's one n or two n's etc
 

skinnyguy

Active member
Oct 7, 2004
546
179
43
SPs (and others) that try to seem worldly but don't know the difference between discrete and discreet.
 

Mr Bret

Well-known member
Aug 13, 2012
5,461
939
113
Do you have a word or 2 you always screw up? Can't seem to pronounce or spell it right?

Mine are:

1. Cinnamon - ciminmin, cinnimin, sinamon, cinninimimin, blah!

2. Anomoly - anonaly, anomonaly, enominaly, whatever lol!

3. Statistic - stastistic, stastisctic, stasstistic, Fml!
Statistics would probably show that it's not an anomaly for people to have trouble with the word cinnamon.
 

Mr Bret

Well-known member
Aug 13, 2012
5,461
939
113
I have the bilingual issue too. I spell words in french often. That's what u get for 13yrs of french immersion. Lol.
Backwards sentence structure is another curse of the French/English thing.

"I spell words in French often" or "I often spell words in French".

As long as you kiss the French way, it's all good. ;)
 

MissCroft

Sweetie Pie
Feb 23, 2004
7,113
849
113
Toronto
Many people say supposably, when in fact it is pronounced supposedly.

When people pronounce the 'b' after the 'p' it is because of place assimilation. Both bilabial consonants. It is more natural for the mouth to stay at the same place (a P to a B) than moving to a D.
 
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bemeup

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2010
2,139
3,079
113
Not a mispronounciation, but I've been looking at apartment rental ads on BP and Craigslist lately, and about 50% of the time "quiet" is mispelled as "quite". Also, alot of the ads spell Yonge St. as Young St.
 
Ashley Madison
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