How is salmon pronounced?

The pronunciation of salmon is often object of confusion. In English, the correct pronunciation of salmon is sam-un. The "l" in salmon is silent. However, in certain dialects and varieties of English salmon is occasionally pronounced with an "l".
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Is it acceptable to pronounce the l in salmon?

In Latin, the word for fish is salmo, and the L is pronounced. Even though the English word spelling changed from samoun to salmon, the pronunciation stayed the same, making the L silent. We are allowed to pronounce the L in Salmonella but are not supposed to pronounce the L in the fish, salmon.
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Why is the L not pronounced in salmon?

The word comes ultimately from the Latin salmon, but we got it by way of French, as we did with so many other food words. The French, as was their wont, had swallowed up the Latin L in their pronunciation, so by the time we English borrowed the word, it was saumon, no L in the spelling and so no L in the pronunciation.
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Is L silent in almond?

More recent standard dictionaries say we can now properly pronounce “almond” either with or without the “l” sound.
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Do you pronounce the T in often?

A: The word “often” can be pronounced with a silent “t” (the more common pronunciation) or with an audible “t.” How “correct” is the second pronunciation? That depends on the dictionary you consult. Both are correct, according to The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.).
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How to Pronounce Salmon? (CORRECTLY) | SEH-M'N Pronunciation



Is the L silent in walk?

L is also silent in could, should, would, as well as in calf and half, and in chalk, talk, walk, and for many people in calm, palm, and psalm.
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Do you pronounce the h in herb?

The British pronunciation is "Herbs" with an "H" while American pronunciation is "erbs" without the "H." Quite simple, eh? Just like this simple vinaigrette recipe to go with your herb salad. "Herb" or "erb," it's really your choice.
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Why do Americans say aluminum?

The American Chemical Society adopted “aluminum” because of how widely it was used by the public, but the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry officially designated the metal as “aluminium” as recently as 1990.
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Why do British say zed?

The British and others pronounce “z”, “zed”, owing to the origin of the letter “z”, the Greek letter “Zeta”. This gave rise to the Old French “zede”, which resulted in the English “zed” around the 15th century.
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Why do Americans say period?

In 19th-century texts, both British English and American English were consistent in their usage of the terms period and full stop. The word period was used as a name for what printers often called the "full point", the punctuation mark that was a dot on the baseline and used in several situations.
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Is the R in iron silent?

The silent R in 'iron' in BrE

The reason why the r in 'iron' is absent in British English is because the r is followed by a consonant now (followed by /n/ in /'aɪərn/) and British English is non-rhotic, meaning the r is only pronounced when followed by a vowel.
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Why is there an R in February?

Have you ever wondered why February has that random, silent first r? Well, February, like the names of most months, has Latin roots. It descended from Februarius, a month in the ancient Roman calendar. The name actually comes from the festival of februum, a purification ritual celebrated during the month.
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Why S is silent in Island?

Island was long written with different spellings which didn't include 's', so it has presumably always been pronounced without /s/. (The derivation is not from Latin insula but from various Germanic forms, which also had no 's'.)
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Do you say caramel or Carmel?

Caramel is pronounced with three syllables. Carmel, the city, is pronounced with two syllables. You can use the number of syllables in each word to link it with other nouns of the same type: caramel and aerogel are both three-syllable common nouns, while Carmel and Arnold are both two-syllable proper nouns.
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Which letter is silent in the word knife?

The letter ⟨k⟩ is normally silent (i.e. it does not reflect any sound) when it precedes an ⟨n⟩ at the beginning of a word, as in “knife”, and sometimes by extension in other positions.
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How does the Queen pronounce scone?

People in the north of England and Scotland overwhelmingly used the “skon” pronunciation and those in the Midlands and London were significantly more likely to go with “skone”. Sources say the Queen sides with “skon”... perhaps because of her love for Balmoral.
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Is the D silent in Sandwich?

In the word 'sandwich', if you looked that up in the dictionary, you WOULD see the D sound. But it's actually never pronounced that way. So Wednesday, Handsome: the dictionary says no D. But 'Sandwich', the dictionary does say D but it hasn't caught up with the actual habits of how we speak.
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Why is there ad in Wednesday?

Wodan and Mercury, although quite different, were both linked to the day of the week we know as Wednesday. As Wōdnesdæg moved from Old English to Middle English, its spelling changed. It became "Wednesdei" and the "d" remained, even as the word morphed into "Wednesday."
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Why is Colonel pronounced that way?

This was because the rank was bestowed upon the commander of a column of troops. This word was then adopted by the French, who translated the term in their own language, converted the word 'colonnello' to the word 'coronel'. This is the reason why 'colonel' is pronounced 'kernel'.
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Is R silent in water?

Water, water. This Flap T sound is the R sound in some other languages like Arabic, Spanish, Portuguese. But, in American English we call it a Flap T, and the tongue just bounces up against the roof of the mouth.
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Is there an emoji for period?

Smartphone users will now be able to discuss menstruation with an emoji – as a period emoji has been released as part of Apple's latest iOS software. The emoji, which is a drop of blood, is one of 230 new emojis revealed by the Unicode Consortium earlier this year, which also include gender-neutral characters.
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What does full stop mean in England?

Definition of full stop

chiefly British. : a point . used to show the end of a sentence or an abbreviation : period sense 5a … the full stop after the roman numeral …—
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