RE: [Corpora-List] pronunciation

From: Crowdy, Steve (Steve.Crowdy@pearsoned-ema.com)
Date: Wed Jul 24 2002 - 10:49:27 MET DST

  • Next message: Gregor Erbach: "RE: [Corpora-List] pronunciation"

    This word has many mispelling variants. The Longman Learners Corpus (around
    11 million words) lists the following spellings of "pronunciation":

    pronunciation (frequency 154)
    pronounciation (49)
    prononciation (6)
    pronunication (6)
    pronuciation (4)

    Other misspellings in the LLC include: pronuntiation, pronanciation,
    pronuntation, pronuncition, pronunciotion, pronuncation, pronouncition,
    pronounceretion, pronouncation, pronouciation, and pronoucation.

    Even in native speaker corpora "pronouciation" does creep in. Looking at a
    large corpus of UK news data, even the hallowed pages of the BBC website
    reveals 10 instances of "pronounciation".

    Steve Crowdy
    Longman Dictionaries

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Peter K Tan [mailto:petertan@leonis.nus.edu.sg]
    Sent: 24 July 2002 04:42
    To: CORPORA@HD.UIB.NO
    Subject: Re: [Corpora-List] pronunciation

    At 10.38 am 24-7-02 +0800, Josephine Lo wrote:
    >Dear all,
    >I'm interested in the word "pronunciation" since recently I noticed
    >that it is quite commonly misspelled as "pronounciation". Is this a
    >common mistake only among non-native speakers?

    I don't have access to Learner Corpora, but it might be worthwhile doing a
    search there. Speaking based on my experience of marking essays from
    Singaporean students, the spelling 'pronounciation' appears to be the
    majority spelling - and they still surprisingly predominate in these days
    of spell-check. (They also pronounce it with the /aU/ diphthong.) Also, I
    find 'maintainance' as well, whereas others like 'renunciation',
    'denunciation' don't occur frequently enough for me to notice a tendency.
    'Annunciation' is more specialised and is typically spelt as such -
    presumably because of its occurrence in Christian contexts.

    >Is is possible that the "o" one would make its way through and
    >eventually replace "pronunciation"?

    Spelling in English is very conservative. I would imagine that it would
    need more than the spellings of second-language to influence change and it
    is the spelling of Inner Circle speakers that would be crucial. More
    crucially, they would need to change the pronunciation of 'pronunciation' -
    compare this with the spellings 'shew' and 'show' which co-existed for a
    long time before the former waned not too long ago.

    Cheers,
    Peter

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