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Contributr
I didn't know #10 -- I'm not sure I can undo 50 years of mischievious mispronunciation... wink

I've got a few more for you:

issue -- isssss sue or is u
schedule -- ske jul; ske ju el; sai jul
harass -- HAR us versus her ass

Actually, I can't come up with a phonetic representation of the the last version of schedule -- it's a soft ch instead of hard.

Which is correct?
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I always had a problem pronouncing exhaust i always break it up into ex....haust
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Jewel is pronounced joo-uhl. Jewelry is pronounced JOO-uhl-ree, not JOOL-ree as in drool-ry. The second syllable is very brief, though.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/jewelry
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/jewelry

And if sounding intelligent is the desired ends of your advice then perhaps omitting the use of "supposed to" and "used to" would be more appropriate since neither is best practice in grammar.
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Sorry Jon
ComputerCookie Updated - 7th Aug 2008
the second reference you cite states
Main Entry: jew?el?ry
Pronunciation: \ˈj?-əl-rē, ˈj?l-rē, ˈju̇l-; ?ˈj?-lə-rē\

Nothing like JOO-uhl-ree.

ˈj?-əl-rē, ˈj?l-rē appear to me to be correct, perhaps this is why yanks often resort to the term 'bling' as they cannot pronounce jewelry!!!
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You may want to check that again.
Everyone is correct, all 3 are acceptible according to the pronunciations listed.
JOO-uhl-ree, JOOL-ree, JOO-luh-ree
It appears that this word should not have appeared on the list in the first place.
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JOOLree
siliconjon@... 11th Aug 2008
Well, I looked right over that. Sure enough my Meriam Webster shows ˈj?l-rē to be a method of pronunciation. However I must say that the Cambridge pronunciation is my favorite, and the pronunciation listed in this article is still low on the list of dictionaries that claim that to be a proper pronunciation. Though I should shut up before a bird dive bombs my nose hole.

http://dictionary.cambridge.org/results.asp?dict=A&searchword=jewelry
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Same with February
Madjia 15th Aug 2008
Both pronunciations of February are widely accepted and used. One does not make the other sound stupid.

Feb?ru?ary
Pronunciation:
\ˈfe-b(y)ə-ˌwer-ē, ˈfe-brə-\

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/february

Maybe check some dictionaries before posting about 'mistakes'
I will agree that the link you followed has my preferred pronunciation, however the manner in which I spelled its phonetics is exactly how the pronunciation is displayed at the first link to dictionary.reference.com. "Uhl" is a bit brutish sounding.

Why would you make such a sloppy argument? Come on man, stay with me! wink

http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/division.html
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Many non-Americans would also point out that the Yanks can't spell *jewellery*, either.

\ˈj?-lə-rē\ makes sense as a pronunciation given that spelling.
To really rectify this in anyone's mind, break it down to the root word: Jewel (it is 2 syllables to some, but still the root is jewel (Jool) its not Jew El so take the root and add ree jewel (jool-ree)
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I'm very fer-mil-yer with those pronunciations of realty and realtor. I've always grouped them with the ju-le-ry pronunciation. (It's made by a jew-ler, right? From jewls.)

The other thing about "supposed to" is "suppose to", similarly, "use to". Should of, could of, wood of.
I hate ree-la-tor, too, but why do people insist on pronouncing it realTORE, like you tore something. We don't pronounce author auTHORE, or refridgeraTORE. Is it just because these people are snooty a$$holes that make a lot of money?
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Moderator
And that's the pronunciation preferred by the National Association of Realtors®

And because the derivations are different. Author and refrigerator came from Old English; Realtor®: was coined in 1916.
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refrigerator
juddz90 1st Nov 2011
I doubt it's old English, seeing as refrigerators weren't made until recently, and it's been a long while since people have even spoken middle English.
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Moderator
re??frig??er??a??tor???/r????fr??d??????re??t??r/ Show Spelled[ri-frij-uh-rey-ter]
noun
1. a box, room, or cabinet in which food, drink, etc., are kept cool by means of ice or mechanical refrigeration.
2. the part of a distilling apparatus that cools the volatile material, causing it to condense; condenser; rectifier.
Origin: 1605???15; refrigerate + -or2
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Fatal mistake
AnsuGisalas 26th Apr 2010
Too late Mike realized that it wasn't the realtor he was telling off after all... it was the REAL THOR!
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Moderator
Punny points.
boxfiddler 26th Apr 2010
laugh
Did you eat?

is not "Jeeet"
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Some even say 'Jew-Ree'
jondowd Updated - 14th Dec 2009
There is a long standing radio ad in Southern Oregon where the announcer obviously has trouble pronouncing the letter 'L' - The ad he's recorded is for a jewelry store, but he can't say the letter 'L' so each utterance comes out 'jew-ree' (my mother-in-law also pronounces it that way : -)
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A glide is a non-syllabic vowel that's appended to a syllabic vowel. Like the word "like" ['laik].
In the "jewelry" case the vowels are quite similar in quality, but there's a tonal rise towards the "l".
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irregardless
Neon Samurai 31st Jul 2008
How so many educated people can feel the need to pronounce it this way *regardless* of the correct word.
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Yours belongs in the grammar/spelling thread, not the phoneme department. Besides, even I can't mispronounce "irregardless".
People mispronounce "regardless" by adding the "i," so just like several of the words on the article are the result of adding letters or syllables when pronouncing them, so is "irregardless." I'm surprised it wasn't part of the list.
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Aluminium
jhenderson@... 7th Aug 2008
It's al-you-MIN-ee-um - not al-OO-min-um.
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Unless...
seanferd 7th Aug 2008
You're in the north-west hemi-demisphere. North America kicked out that extra "i". It was confusing us.
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...Helum; Lithum; Beryllum; Sodum; Magnesum; Postassum; Calcum; Titanum; Chromum; Gallum; Germanum; Selenum; Strontum; Yttrum; Zirconum; Rhodum; Palladum; Cadmum; Cesum; Barum; Iridum; Polonum; Radum; Thorum; Uranum; Neptunum; Plutonum; Americum; Californum; etc.
Not for everyone, but some visionaries seem to have gone that route already. grin
Most likely because of the lack of dueling u,i and iu. Far too confusing. "Prurient" confuses us as well. Axe me anudder one. happy
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Nomenclature history

The earliest citation given in the Oxford English Dictionary for any word used as a name for this element is alumium, which British chemist and inventor Humphry Davy employed in 1808 for the metal he was trying to isolate electrolytically from the mineral alumina. The citation is from his journal Philosophical Transactions: "Had I been so fortunate as..to have procured the metallic substances I was in search of, I should have proposed for them the names of silicium, alumium, zirconium, and glucium."[27]

By 1812, Davy had settled on aluminum, which, as other sources note,[citation needed] matches its Latin root. He wrote in the journal Chemical Philosophy: "As yet Aluminum has not been obtained in a perfectly free state."[28] But the same year, an anonymous contributor to the Quarterly Review, a British political-literary journal, objected to aluminum and proposed the name aluminium, "for so we shall take the liberty of writing the word, in preference to aluminum, which has a less classical sound."[29]

The -ium suffix had the advantage of conforming to the precedent set in other newly discovered elements of the time: potassium, sodium, magnesium, calcium, and strontium (all of which Davy had isolated himself). Nevertheless, -um spellings for elements were not unknown at the time, as for example platinum, known to Europeans since the sixteenth century, molybdenum, discovered in 1778, and tantalum, discovered in 1802.

Americans adopted -ium to fit the standard form of the periodic table of elements, for most of the nineteenth century, with aluminium appearing in Webster's Dictionary of 1828. In 1892, however, Charles Martin Hall used the -um spelling in an advertising handbill for his new electrolytic method of producing the metal, despite his constant use of the -ium spelling in all the patents[24] he filed between 1886 and 1903.[30] It has consequently been suggested that the spelling reflects an easier to pronounce word with one fewer syllable, or that the spelling on the flier was a mistake. Hall's domination of production of the metal ensured that the spelling aluminum became the standard in North America; the Webster Unabridged Dictionary of 1913, though, continued to use the -ium version.

In 1926, the American Chemical Society officially decided to use aluminum in its publications; American dictionaries typically label the spelling aluminium as a British variant
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Very cool.
seanferd 9th Aug 2008
Thanks. Pretty good Wikipedia article, that.
The "british" way also used in Ausie and the Canadian/US way used locally. At least that one is not adding extra imaginary sylables.
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...ya furry foreigner. Learn how to spell, then maybe you'll learn how to pronunciate.
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Moderator
or how hirsute he may be. It's all about the language difference.

We speak American. He speaks English.
I live in Southern West Virginia. I can not for the life of me prounce (or spell for that matter) Aluminium. It usually enda up sounding like "uh-loom-in-num" (and usually to poke fun at myself there are a few extra "num"s at the end)

I can't pronounce the correct name for Massachusetts... usually ends up sounding like Mass-uh-two-shits
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I KNOW!!!
josie3mom@... 7th Aug 2008
"Irregardless" makes me insane, and I pride myself on tolerance of many things "grammar-ly" (hee hee)...

Ugh!!!!
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I think we could really talk about this further offline. Let's recircle the wagons later and really hack it out. wink

Having said that, ...

(eesh.. I don't think there's a phrasing in there that doesn't make my ears bleed a little; especially irregardless and the back-peddling of "having said that")
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Before I open my mouth I always pull down my websters. If we DON'T stop saying something the WRONG way, it becomes part of our language. Websters has a NICE way of saying (to whomever chooses to use the word "irregardless")HEY BUBBA...THAT'S NOT EVEN A WORD! (LOL) Websters has in fact incorporated the non-word, as it has become used by so many, so often, that you simply can't just do away with it. So here is websters nice way: Irregardless: Regardless: a nonstandard or humorous usage.

I almost fell over when a woman in front of me on an elevator said to her partner: Lets go get a Ji-ro (it sounded like "High Road" in her pronunciation) and we can have some buh KLA va!" (It's a greek pastry pronounced BA klaVAH. Stay tuned for another post from me....you'll love it, I promise!
.. I've an extremely smart (reads quantum physics books textbooks as personal casual reading) whom I hear the term from most.. usually followed by "that being said".. which is probably second or third on my list of thinks that make babby webster cry.
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I was going to mention the same thing. If you break it down, *irregardless* is really a double negative:

REGARD is self explanatory
REGARDLESS means without regard so I guess
IRREGARDLESS would mean NOT without regard
witch I'm pretty sure gets us back to where we started.
hadn't fully formed as an idea until now but I popped open your comment and went "drat, that was how I was going to respond".
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Orientate is MY big pet peeve. It is ORIENTED, not orientated.

I also hate conversate instead of talk, and axing instead of asking.
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Even funnier
Oz_Media 20th Oct 2009
DIS-orientated grin
When you pronounce it mischevious it sounds so much more mischievous because then it rhymes with devious. It might be wrong but it is also certainly more fun.
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Moderator
Library - li berry. Aarrggh.
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And what about
Jessie 7th Aug 2008
Amalance (AM-uh-lance) which so many Midwesterners say instead of Ambulance (AM-byoo-luns)
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Amalance ...
Mike Barron 28th Dec 2010
That's what my company 'manafactures'! Woot!
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?
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Sec-a-tree
jhenderson@... 7th Aug 2008
I hear this one from newsreaders quite often.
"The Secatree Genral of the UN..."
It's *SEC-ret-ary GEN-er-al* - just like it's spelt.
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