0
Anonymous Posted 19 years ago
Speech & Pronunciation

write and written

0Hi there,02br
02br
00I am a non-native English teacher. I want to explain to my students the reasons behind the difference in pronouncing 'write' and 'written' is that 'written' has double Ts. How can I tell them about this? 02br
02br
00Second question: I want to tell students the correct of pronunciation of 'Donald'. It should not be pronounced as 'Do-nald'. It should be spoken as 'Don-nald' because 'n' is shared by the two vowels 'o' and 'a'. So how can I explain this in correct written and spoken English?02br
02br
00Newcomer0-
  

Top answer

0 01blockquote 00I want to explain to my students the reasons behind the difference in pronouncing 'write' and 'written' is that 'written' has double Ts. 12blockquote 10Whether it's written with 2 t's or 3 t's or no t's has absolutely nothing to do with why it's pronounced like that. And to properly explain the reason for that you'd have to go all the way back to Old English.

  • 0 01blockquote 00I want to explain to my students the reasons behind the difference in pronouncing 'write' and 'written' is that 'written' has double Ts.
  • 12blockquote 10Whether it's written with 2 t's or 3 t's or no t's has absolutely nothing to do with why it's pronounced like that.
  • And to properly explain the reason for that you'd have to go all the way back to Old English.
  • 01blockquote 02br 10Second question: I want to tell students the correct of pronunciation of 'Donald'.
  • It should not be pronounced as 'Do-nald'.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
0 01blockquote
00I want to explain to my students the reasons behind the difference in pronouncing 'write' and 'written' is that 'written' has double Ts. How can I tell them about this?12blockquote
10Whether it's written with 2 t's or 3 t's or no t's has absolutely nothing to do with why it's pronounced like that. And to properly explain the reason for tha
0
0 It seems to me that you are wrestling with the "Second-Letter Rule", which says that a single vowel letter (i.e., not combined with another vowel letter in a digraph) is pronounced tense if the second letter after it is another vowel letter, lax otherwise. (01i00lady, caddie, hope, hop, hoping, hopping, June, junk, bite, bit, bitty, bitten, ...02i00) Unfortunately

Related Questions