In most of the United States, Lawyer is pronounced to rhyme with “boy,” (loyer). In the south, excluding Texas and Florida (not really south I’ve been told), it is pronounced to rhyme with “saw,” (law-yer). Southerners put the law into lawyer.
Full Answer
What is the correct way to pronounce this: Dido and Aeneas?
You will state your full name and residential address, with a declaration that:
Types of Lawyers
Like the word February, there is a tendency for some speakers to leave out the r sound after the b in library, resulting in libary as the pronunciation. The r is not silent, though, so the standard pronunciation calls for leaving the br sound in place.
In addition to these, T is also silent in words: Christmas and mortgage.
In most of the United States, Lawyer is pronounced to rhyme with “boy,” (loyer). In the south, excluding Texas and Florida (not really south I’ve been told), it is pronounced to rhyme with “saw,” (law-yer). Southerners put the law into lawyer.
The r in February has been dropped so that it is almost always pronounced Febuary–without the r. Perhaps this is because placing the r sound in the word makes it slightly more difficult to pronounce, and since laziness tends to get the upper hand when we speak, Febuary has become the common pronunciation.
The short answer is that the addition of an “r” sound at the end of a word like “soda” or “idea” is a regionalism and isn’t considered a mispronunciation. Here’s the story. In English words spelled with “r,” the consonant used to be fully pronounced everywhere.
Also, the “p” in receipt is silent. Imagine the p just isn’t there. So a recipe tells you how to make food, and you get a receipt after you buy something.
The same thing is true of some other Greek-derived words with an initial “p,” like “pneuma-” and “psycho-.” In all these words the initial “p” was pronounced until it wasn’t any more. Depot is a word. The t is silent.