Why do we pronounce bass and bass differently?

1 Answer

Answer :

To remove confusion about people playing fish or vice versa. I dunno. Probably goes a long way back, though.

Related questions

Description : Do you know any words you would spell differently but would pronounce the same?

Last Answer : answer:I know a few homophones: Deer, dear. Sent, cent, scent. Pie, pi.

Description : French-speaking jellies: how do you pronounce the word "bransiller"?

Last Answer : answer:Did you find it in a sentence? On a sign? When I search for it, it always comes up capitalized, so since there's no definition and it's capitalized, I'm guessing it's a name. From my memory of ... it, Bra'-see-ya You sort of swallow the end of Bra and say that part through your nose.

Description : How would you pronounce "schism"?

Last Answer : I’d pronounce it Skis-im

Description : How do you pronounce this?

Last Answer : It’s “tords”. I’ve never said it or heard it any other way.

Description : Do you pronounce the "L" in "palm"?

Last Answer : answer:Yes, I do as well. I wouldn’t take Dictionary.com as the authority on pronunciation or anything else. The OED gives the following: “Pronunciation: Brit. /pɑːm/ , U.S. /pɑ(l)m/” Merriam-Webster gives: “noun \ˈpäm, ˈpälm, ˈpȯm, ˈpȯlm\”

Description : How do you pronounce Springerle?

Last Answer : ʃpʀɪŋɛʀlə

Description : How could you spell this pseudo word in a way people would know how to pronounce it on sight?

Last Answer : “Geen bean” in my head sounds like green bean without the “r.” Throw in an apostrophe, maybe? G’een bean.

Description : How do you pronounce cisgendered?

Last Answer : Wikipedia says the pronunciation is ”/‘sɪsdʒɛndər/”, therefore “siss-gendered” is correct.

Description : What is it that causes people to mis-say or mis-pronounce certain words?

Last Answer : is “mis-say” a word?

Description : Do you pronounce the word "human" as though it were spelled "yuman?"?

Last Answer : I use the “y” sound yes. Is it really meant to be pronounced the way it is spelled!? I didn’t even know people used the “h” to begin with!

Description : What are the top 5 russian-sounding words that Americans can pronounce and spell?

Last Answer : What kind of product? A good airline would be PubicAir. A good potato chip could be Spud-nic.

Description : Do you choose to pronounce words in the original accent or as they have come to be pronounced over time?

Last Answer : well we all have differant accents and I think that has alot to do with it.But in a professional way it is correct way that is in the dictionary.

Description : How do you pronounce the word "suite"?

Last Answer : It’s usually pronounced as sweet, at least here in NorthEast of US.

Description : Etymology -- why does the verb "pronounce" lose the letter O when it becomes the noun "pronunciation"?

Last Answer : answer:I recall I always used to say “pronounciation”. Anyway, I looked it up, and according to Wiktionary, it’s derived > From Latin pronuntiatio, noun of action from perfect passive participle pronuntiatus, from verb pronuntiare proclaim, from pro- for + nuntiare announce.

Description : What are some words, that, despite being spelled identically, mean opposite things when pronounced differently, or used in a different context?

Last Answer : Two of my favorites are maroon and quiver. This is a game I used to play with my daughter, spelled the same, pronounced the same, but have no connection whatsoever.

Description : What is your preferred terminology for people whose brains work differently?

Last Answer : answer:Mental disorder means there can be order. It’s just in disarray (my words). Mental illness reads likes sickness, disease, of which there may or may not be a cure – but I aint sticking around to find out if you’ve found one. So I’ll go for mental disorder.

Description : What are some words that people say differently?

Last Answer : Blouse wth an ‘s’ sound or with a ‘z’ sound. For Canadians the proper pronunciation of our province Quebec is wide open! Wednesday is wensday, tuesday can be toosday or choosday.

Description : Suppose a female prisoner escapes. If the police want to find the person, do we still call it a manhunt?

Last Answer : Or like getting mail from the femaleman.

Description : Do we need a new word for "disease?"?

Last Answer : No, we do not. “Disease” works just fine. If one needs more specific detail than that then such detail is easily added.

Description : Games then: We write a story. Who wants to play?

Last Answer : …sounded a…

Description : Why do so many websites use blue ink vs. traditional black for words we are reading?

Last Answer : answer:A lot of creative color on websites is annoying. Young eyes see things more easily. Also the people creating and writing the websites are very familiar with the copy and probably barely need to read ... to read on a white or light background. I have no trouble reading the red fluther uses.

Description : Should we change what we mean by the word, family?

Last Answer : answer:I remember when I was in my mid teens I was with my high school boyfriend andnI don't remember the situation, but I was worried about something to do with a stranger, and my boyfriend ... we are, rather than looking at how dissimilar and caring about all people in that golden rule sense.

Description : Can we go back to the conservative use of the word, conservative?

Last Answer : I will agree with you on that, ET. Some Republicans, like myself, are having trouble associating with some of Boehner & Company’s moves, but unfortunately they aren’t listening.

Description : What can we do besides hang?

Last Answer : Simply “stand”? Still standing….

Description : Why do we refer to so many jobs as "9 to 5", when almost all of them start at 8 or earlier?

Last Answer : It’s a catch all for usually predictable occupations where there is a lunch hour thrown in the day somewhere. Most people don’t get paid while on lunch break.

Description : What are some concepts that we have a lot of words for?

Last Answer : Unclear, ambiguous, nebulous, fuzzy, vague.

Description : How come we define nothing, if nothing isn't supposed to be anything at all?

Last Answer : It’s a concept. The human mind holds information conceptually which means it is an abstraction, which means it does not have to refer to a specific object in reality, but it certainly refers to domething that is real.

Description : Why do animals that we eat get a special name?

Last Answer : I call my meat what it is, most of the time. On a nice, Spring evening, there's nothing better than grilling some cow ass and chicken titty, lol. I don't think I ever use the word poultry or fowl ... instead of venison most of the time. And I never eat baby cows; that's going too far, for me.

Description : How can we translate numbers into letters?

Last Answer : If you look at the keys on the phone there are three letters associated with each number. Write out the phone number and write the letters assocatied with each number above the number. Then look at the letters and ... . It has to be in order, or you can't dial the number from looking at the words.

Description : All we are saying, is give __________ a chance! Any suggestions people?

Last Answer : Meatcake

Description : If we started writing silly poetry designed to offend everyone in one fail swoop, do you suppose anyone would find humor in it?

Last Answer : I will laugh, and more so if my “group” is included.

Description : Is there an antonym for "improved"? If not, can we invent one?

Last Answer : Worsen, worsened, worsening.

Description : Have we gotten to the point that we can add ed to any noun?

Last Answer : noed

Description : In what ways do we answer questions or respond without actually speaking?

Last Answer : Sometimes,just a look says it all ;)

Description : Why do we say "what's up?" to people?

Last Answer : Damn that rabbit

Description : Why do we always have to say please??

Last Answer : It’s to weed out the insensitive and inconsiderate.

Description : What do we mean when we say "random"?

Last Answer : answer:Unpredictable, unforeseen, odd, unexpected, coincidental, not following a logical path . That's along the lines of how I'd interpret random . My Mac OS X Thesaurus says: ... , undirected, casual, indiscriminate, nonspecific, haphazard, stray, erratic; chance, accidental. antonym systematic.

Description : Botanical Words Alphabetical List - WE

Last Answer : WET SOIL PLANTS:Plants, such as Willow, Cranberry, and Japanese Iris, which can endure a large amount of moisture in the soil. WETTING AGENT: 1. This is material that reduces the amount of water ... also can be a material added to pesticide sprays so that they spread easily over the plant surface.

Description : How do we pronounce MOOC to make it sound like something good?

Last Answer : I like the sound of “Mook”. I don’t know why, but I like it. Any other way of pronouncing it would just sound like you were trying too hard not to call it “Mook”

Description : How are we supposed to pronounce Celtic?

Last Answer : Both.

Description : Are men named Fritz insulted by the expression "on the fritz"?

Last Answer : Yes, I am familiar with it. I still hear it. But no, I wouldn't expect Fritz to take it personally. Lots of names are also unrelated words; for example: Bob Rob Sue Matt Bill Don Peg Barb Randy ... wouldn't mean much to him, never mind insulting him. Could be worse. He could have been named Dick.

Description : Can you put these words in order?

Last Answer : Create Fortune Classics Wonder Tutor Intent Benign

Description : Is the term "award winning" meaningless?

Last Answer : There was an industry magazine that awarded “Most innovative” and “most ground breaking” and Best of the year” awards to companies in my inudustry. They were awarded based on the amount spent on advertising in the magazine and buying the most seats/biggest table for the awards dinner.

Description : Do speakers of other languages play with their words the way English speakers do?

Last Answer : I know the Japanese enjoy puns and double-entendre jokes in their own language as much as we do in ours. Does that count?

Description : Did you know that a group of Komodo dragons is called a bank?

Last Answer : Bank of Dragons Murder of Crows Flutter of Jellyfish Herd of Cattle

Description : Does anyone besides me use a thesaurus any more?

Last Answer : I look up words on my phone multiple times each week, and the resulting information includes synonyms that I always peruse. Strictly speaking, I’m not using a thesaurus, but I’m digesting the same information.

Description : What was the most embarrasing time you incorrectly used a word or phrase?

Last Answer : I mixed up castigated with castrated once, and, asked whether I knew what “castrated” meant, said I did (because I thought I did – I thought it meant what castigated meant).

Description : What exactly is disillusionment?

Last Answer : There is a difference. When someone is disillusioned, they have the feeling that their previous perspective was an illusion, and now they feel they perceive the disheartening truth. Disappointment is generally a ... and realized the author I'd thought I liked, is actually someone I can't respect.

Description : What words can you think of that can use any of the five vowels, in turn?

Last Answer : tat Tet tit tot tut bat bet bit bot but fan fen fin fon fun

Description : The use of the word STINT?

Last Answer : Stint can mean a period of time but usually time spent working. Eg He did a two hour stint in an Amazon warehouse. A long stint drinking coffee doesn’t sound right unless meant in a humorous way.