I recently read something disturbing at Merriam-Webster
It's been haunting my very dreams.
Answer the question before you click, please: How do you say the word "detritus"?
Answer the question before you click, please: How do you say the word "detritus"?
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 87
So?
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Yeah, M-W is right
73 (83.9%)
Nah, they absolutely gotta be trolling us somehow
14 (16.1%)
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(Did not answer poll because neither answer fit my reaction.)
I suspect that I would naturally say it with the stress on the first syllable, but am also familiar with the pronunciation with the stress on the second syllable.
My Canadian Oxford Dictionary agrees with M-W about where the stress is.
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irrelevant fact
I've heard "detritus" prounced three or four different ways, ever. I can't say that any of them are right or wrong, just more common. (I also admit to being an amateur who votes on the side of descriptive rather than prescriptive for language thingies.)
Re: irrelevant fact
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And I loved Conuly slipping in the Pratchett reference, sly little minx that she is. :-)
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Yet according to this page, the UK pronunciation also has a long accented 2nd syllable:
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/detritus
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I'm southern English if it helps in the survey
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Nope, don't care, gonna continue pronouncing it deh-trih-tus and blaming the OED if anyone asks.
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I pronounce the first syllable as a schwa, but a schwa tinged with that short "i" sound, if that makes sense.
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As for the confusion - there you are. It's straight from Latin via French. The letter i does not represent the vowel in "eye" in either Latin or French.
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I now pronounce it the way Detritus's name is pronounced in the Pratchett novels[1]. Before that I would have pronounced it Dee Tree Us - if I had ever needed to pronounce it, which I hadn't - because I had never heard it said and I read fast. I don't need to have a sound for a word in order to understand it and keep going. :)
[1] which is pretty much MW in a British accent
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Mind you, the same person does say "grarph" paper, where I go for "graff", so...
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EDIT: yeah, that's correct. How were you pronouncing it?
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The "alternate pronunciation" that really annoys me is 'puh-TEEN-uh' for patina. I realize it's a bit of a classist shibboleth, but it only got to be one because some people won't shut up when they don't know what they're talking about.
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okay, so what pronunciation do you go with?
(And for me, it's "the hoi polloi". I believe I've said this before, but since the only reason to use that phrase unironically is to be a pretentious asshole, you have GOT to get it right or not even bother.)
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I understand your point about hoi polloi, which is a phrase almost no one uses unironically anyhow, but disagree with it (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hoi%20polloi). "English doesn't borrow from other languages. It follows them down dark alleys, knocks them on the head, and goes through their pockets for spare grammar." 'The hoi polloi' would be bad Greek, but it's perfectly correct English, insofar as 'correct English' isn't an oxymoron to begin with.
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It's one of those words I've read for years, but never heard anyone say.
I thought it was DEH-trih-tis, but it appears that deh-TRY-tuss is the American pronunciation. So... clearly, I've never heard anyone actually say it until I looked it up. :O
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