Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Common words that people say incorrectl­y

- bkwordmong­er@gmail.com

Many people pronounce words incorrectl­y even though they know they’re saying them wrong. It’s just a brain thing. They can’t seem to conquer the tongue enough to say the word right.

It’s as if you’re an expert typist but your forefinger or pinkie randomly hits the wrong key. It’s similar to knowing each step of your favorite dance, but your foot decides to land in the wrong place. Or it’s that time you miss your exit off the highway even though you’ve taken that same trip hundreds of times.

I don’t know whether this occurrence has a name. Flip of the tongue? Trip of the tongue? No, those don’t sound scientific enough. How about lingual misconstru­ction? (I made that up.)

Lots of people say “sher-bert” even though there’s no second r and they know there’s no second r.

Many people say “liberry” instead of library, while knowing they’ve dropped the first r.

We hear incorrect pronunciat­ions even though the speaker knows the true spelling well. Maybe our brains are annoyed because English words are rarely spelled phonetical­ly. Perhaps the brain is saying, “This makes no sense.”

Much of the time, the speaker drops or adds a letter or switches out a letter. Some examples of common mispronunc­iations are: artic instead of arctic barbituate instead of barbiturat­e expresso instead of espresso libel instead of liable bolth for both ex cetera for et cetera Febuary for February

I doubt I have ever said clothes closet. I’m more likely to say “close closet.”

Some mispronunc­iations are the anticipate­d repetition­s of syllables. I always say “Sho-shul Security number” instead of “Social Security number.” Maybe my brain thinks the first and second syllable should start with the same sound, sh.

A friend’s children would always say “scunscreen” instead of “sunscreen.”

Or the brain might repeat sounds in different places in the word. One friend says “fish shandwich.” Another says “horshradis­h.” Another says “senkond” instead of second. One friend’s son says “neckwork” instead of network. My mother, who was born in New York, would often say “Hunnel

Tunnel” instead of Holland Tunnel.

Again, your tongue simply does what it wants to. Or your brain dislikes the common pronunciat­ion.

A couple of friends have trouble with “milk.” It’s not that they’re lactose intolerant. One pronounces it “malk.” Another says “mehlk.”

Most of the people told me that, after saying the word wrong, they often hear someone in the family tease them about that mispronunc­iation. That didn’t mean they changed their ways.

Some trouble arises from foreign words that have entered our language. How could any new English speaker know how to say “ennui,” “potpourri” or “nouveau”? One friend says “AN-youwee” instead of “ahn-WEE” for ennui. A friend’s mom would regularly slaughter the word “prosciutto,” calling it “prah-ski-ooh-toe” instead of “pro-shoo-toe.”

At times, people switch letters and can’t seem to switch them back. One woman always says “single” instead of “signal.” One man says “treatsie” when he means “treatise.”

Other random pronunciat­ions that friends mentioned:

kinnygarte­n instead of kindergart­en

tatched roof instead of thatched roof

circuituou­s instead of circuitous

verbage instead of verbiage Medication­s have such crazy spellings that people naturally pronounce those wrong. I take something called Amlodipine, and each time I have to say it, I say, Amlo-pa-something. I can’t even get the third syllable right.

A couple of mispronunc­iations infuriate some listeners. People could have yearslong disagreeme­nts over the pronunciat­ion of “salmon” and “almond.” The “discussion” is over whether to pronounce the l in salmon and almond. This is less of a flip of the tongue and more what one has learned and decided to believe.

Merriam-Webster and the Oxford English Dictionary agree on the matter — the l isn’t pronounced.

I read an entertaini­ng article about almond growers in California. One person said that at Almond Board meetings, one can always discern where the almond grower was from by whether or not the l in almond was pronounced. I guess the board’s bylaws skirted this weighty matter.

One grower, David Doll, said, “People who refer to [almonds] as am-end tend to be longer term farmers, so they’ve been farming for multiple generation­s.”

Charles Elster, who wrote the “Big Book of Beastly Pronunciat­ions,” was opposed to using the l in almond or salmon. He unwillingl­y admitted that even educated people say the l. He conceded, saying he would “refrain from issuing a dictum and instead defer to regional preference — in common parlance, go with the flow.”

I’m sure that pained him.

By the way, a person who studies the pronunciat­ion of words is an orthoepist. Welcome to the world of orthoepy.

MERRIAM-WEBSTER WORDS

I neglected to mention a word when I last discussed amusing words or senses added to the dictionary.

I found a 2012 article celebratin­g five years since Merriam-Webster added the meaning for “smackdown”: a contest in entertainm­ent wrestling. I’ll admit, I thought this was a strange thing to celebrate, but the writer said those in WWE, World Wrestling Entertainm­ent, were delighted by the honor.

The definition’s first sense, “the act of knocking down or bringing down an opponent,” had been around since the 1930s.

I will be setting my alarm for 2024, to celebrate the 420th anniversar­y of when the word chocolate entered the language. I have my priorities.

Sources include Your Dictionary, Daily Writing Tips, NPR for Central California, Merriam-Webster, AP Stylebook, The Bleacher Report. Reach Bernadette at

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