English pronunciation edit

Hello. I strongly recommend that you buy Longman Pronunciation Dictionary. It's not that expensive ($40 for a new book + CD), and it provides pronunciation for more than 100000 words, and also explains the basics of English phonetics.

That said, the pronunciation of the prefix con- in words such as congratulations is variable, and also depends on the word. The LPD entry reads as follows:

This prefix is pronounced stressed kɒn (1) if the following syllable is unstressed (ˌconfronˈtation), (2) in many two-syllable nouns (ˈcontract, but conˈtrol) ; and (3) in context, when contrastively stressed (ˌuniˌformity and ˈconˌformity). Otherwise it is usually weak kən in Received Pronunciation and General American, though strong in some regional British speech (conˈsider). Before a stem beginning n, one n is lost (conˈnect, ˌconnoˈtation).

As you can see, the situation is rather complex. Peter238 (talk) 23:32, 3 June 2015 (UTC)Reply

New edit

How do you pronounce "new?" I pronounce it to rhyme with "few." Oh, and please don't edit talk page archives. They are not meant to be edited. Johnny Au (talk/contributions) 03:36, 18 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Hiver edit

I joined your discussion on User talk:Johnny Au/Archive8#Quebec accent. Please take a look. Martin sv 85 (talk) 15:56, 3 April 2016 (UTC)Reply