I am conducting a survey about the pronunciation of the end of the second syllable of the words "congratulate" and "congratulations". If you feel like joining in, please let me know what variety of English you speak (which may be different from where you live, for instance if you are essentially a speaker of British English but living in Canada, you would identify yourself as a British English speaker) and which of the following best describes what you say :
1) GRATCH
2) GRADGE
3) GRAT yuh
(if you think you say this, could you please say the word out loud as you would in normal conversation and pay close attention to the actual consonant you produce, to be sure you are not being overly influenced by the spelling).
Thank you!
Canadian English age 66 Gratch
ReplyDeleteThank you, Snowparrot!
DeleteI'm a speaker of American English (grew up in Missouri, white, but went to school with almost all Blacks, now live in California, have lived in Germany and studied other languages).
ReplyDeleteI definitely say number 2 for the exclamation. I'm not completely positive, as I don't say the verb very often, but I think I might say number 1 for that, or maybe something in between 1 and 2.
Thank you, Andrea!
DeleteToronto native age 61. Canadian English speaker. gratch.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Chris.
DeleteGratch. Slightly voiced, but not as much as in gradge.
ReplyDeleteCanadian English with American influence. Born in 1942 & raised in Oklahoma. In Alberta since 1968.
English Canadian. Born and raised on the Prairies (almost all of the time I lived in Winnipeg), but I have lived in Ottawa since 1973.
ReplyDelete"Gradge".
English Canadian, born and raised in Toronto, age 67. I say gratch
ReplyDeleteGratch
ReplyDeleteEnglish Canadian. Born and raised in Alberta but moved to Ottawa in 2000. I say "gradge".
ReplyDeleteI am a British English speaker and have lived in Canada since 1968 and I say Grat Yuh.
ReplyDeleteI am a British English speaker, have lived in Canada since 1968 and I say Grat Yuh
ReplyDeleteEnglish Canadian. Ontario. Gratch.
ReplyDeleteCanadian English speaker from Toronto and I say Gradge .
ReplyDeleteEnglish speaker from the UK: I say "Grat yu"
ReplyDeleteAmerican English <18 congratYUlate and CongratYulations. However I didn't always pronounce it this way, only when I grew interested in linguistics
ReplyDelete