S (letter): Difference between revisions
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'''S''' is the 19th letter of the [[English alphabet]]. Its name is pronounced ''ess''. | '''S''' is the 19th letter of the [[English alphabet]]. Its name is pronounced ''ess''. | ||
==Use in English== | ==Use in English== |
Revision as of 13:02, 29 February 2008
S is the 19th letter of the English alphabet. Its name is pronounced ess.
Use in English
S is a hissing sound, unvoiced, like c in nîce, or voiced, a buzzing sound like z in zoô. (The accents show stress and pronunciation: see English phonemes.)
The UNVOICED, hissing s: sõap, stew, schême, sky, spêed, Srì Lánka (or *Shr-), mòuse, scêne, péts, píps, pāst time = pāssed gone by, míss failure = Míss girl.
The unvoiced, hissing sound is the sound of ss: glāss, grāss, pāss (cf.), híss, lóss, ósscilate, véssel, assûme, and tréspass (where the single s is also a hiss, giving rise to the error *tresspass) though not assůre, which in BrE sounds like ashŏre and in AmE *ashûre. In Missoûri the sound is, however, a buzzing s, like z, while in crêase, dêcrêase and íncrêase (nouns), decrêase, incrêase (verbs), bâsic (as from bâse) and NÁSA (surprisingly between two vowels) it is a hiss. The hissing sound is also that of st before -en and -le (the final vowel is always schwa): lísten (*líssən), fāsten (*fāssən), whístle (*whíssle), cāstle, grístle, hústle, bústle, rústle and, with no e, mústn’t (*mússənt).
Unvoiced final s after voiceless consonants: 1. Plurals: sócks, rîghts, fláps, gáps, décks, nécks, élephants, díscs. 2. Present simple tense, third person singular: hê/shê/ít, géts, êats, séts, quácks, bàrks, pícks, gríps, āsks. 3. Possessives, with apostrophe: Pête’s dóg, thê élephant’s trúnk, Jáck’s cát’s tâil (compare íts, which is a possessive without an apostrophe: the apostrophe is used for ít’s which means ít ís: ít’s lícking íts påw). 4. Looking exactly the same as number 3, contracted ís and hás: ít’s it is, ít’s nót trûe, Níck’s hêre, Rûth’s thére, Pête’s íll, thát boòk’s stûpid, her cát’s cléver.
This sound also appears with a redundant c: scêne, ósscilate, acquiésce, éffervésce, and scéptre (AmE -er).
It’s the hissing s which begins consonant clusters: scãre, askeŵ, scrêam, skì, slîght, småll, snâil, spŷ, splásh, sprêe, sqùash, Srì Lánka, stône, stróng, swéãr, skíll and asbéstos (although this can also be pronounced -zb-).
The VOICED, buzzing s is pronounced like z in zoô. It is not found at the beginning of words: z is used instead. Voiced s is found between vowels and in front of voiced consonants: lâser, resûme, mésmerise, noise, resîgn, phrâses, Présley, Bósnia, Dísney Íslām, although there is a trend to devoice the s in the last word. But in these circumstances s can also be unvoiced as in: oâsis, crîsis, aslêep, disdâin, dismántle.
Voiced final s after voiced consonants and vowels: 1. plurals: bâbies, bônes, dâys, vòwels, potâtoes 2. present simple third person singular: hê/shê/ít, húgs, gôes, cãres, hás, ís, and in the past ẁas 3. possessives: Jâne’s hòuse, Mãry’s sálary, the dóg’s bône, mŷ càr’s frònt sêat, hís, hers, òurs, théirs 4. contracted ís and hás: Pêter’s going, Hárry’s góne, Shêila’s lâte, Jâne’s nót còming, Fréd’s at hôme, hê’s gót flû, nô-òne’s hêre 5. ás
clôse near has unvoiced s (*clôce) and clôse shut has voiced s (= clôze test). A similar case is ûsed (either *yoôzd, straightforward past or past participle of ûse, or *yoôst plus infinitive denoting habit), which can be momentarily ambiguous. In the compûter ûsed to méss úp the blóg one might think at first that the computer *yoôst, with a hissing ss, habitually to mess up a blog, until one gets to hád an ínternet addréss which shows the meaning to be ‘the computer which was used to mess up the blog’ with a buzzing s, or z sound, *yoôzd.
sh is the unvoiced version of zh: ssh! shoôt, cásh, shrîne, shâke, lêash, pósh, áshen. Sometimes, from German, Yiddish and Hebrew, this sound is spelt sch: schwà, schnítzel, Schùltz. (But in escheŵ the s is pronounced separeately fronm the ch: the second syllable is identical to the word cheŵ.) The same sound spelt s before u: BrE sůre, assůredly, AmE sûre, assûredly; préssure and in Irish Seån - also spelt Shåun.
si can be pronounced zh before a vowel: fûsion, derísion, televísion, Âsia (*Âzhə or *Âshə) as is su in pléasure, tréasure (*plézhə, *trézhə) BrE léisure AmE lêisure. But not in every case: while AmE has *Toô-nìzhə for Tunisia, BrE says *Cheŵ-nízìə.
Sy- is always sý- with the exceptions of Sŷracûse and sŷphon: sýrup, sýstem, sýnagogue, sýndicate, sýnthesis, sýntax, sýmptom, sýmbol sign = cýmbal drum
s is silent in chássis (*shássy) prècis (*prâysêe) Àrkansås, Íllinois, îsland (*îlənd) îsle island = aîsle seats (*île) rendezvous (*róndâyvoô).
Voiced s at the end of a word with silent e: pôse, plêase, erâse, phâse, críticise but z is also often found in this position: crâze, hâze, frêeze, frôze.
Most words ending in -îse can also be spelt -îze: críticise or críticize (this is more common in AmE); but since -îze is never found in advîse, ádvertise, comprîse, cómpromise, despîse, éxercise, surmîse, or surprîse (*surprîze appears as late as Jane Austen, but no later) it seems wiser and easier to spell them all -îse. Also, prómíse, prémíse and práctíse (which can be práctice, and is always in AmE) are never -îze because they are all pronounced -íss.