Anonymous wrote:I say Especially close to “ex-specially” I blame it on the 90s Nickelodeon casts.
Breakfast is - breck-fuss-t ..add a hard t
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because some people have difficulty with it. Like ask, library, and breakfast.
It's not like they're saying a totally different, unrecognizable word. You know what they are saying and you're choosing to get huffy about it. Chill.
Wait, how do people say "breakfast"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do so many people say “ex-specially”?
I want someone to do a PSA or YouTube tutorial coaching people on how to break it down and say it correctly.
Eh-specially.
No X.
I wish this didn’t bother me as much as it does.
Are you racist?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I secretly find it cute when people mispronounce words like that because it is more like a dialect (like people in certain areas saying warsh instead of wash or dropping vowels) and I don't need to notify anyone else when I hear it, feel aggravated or start a thread
Op here.
Warsh doesn’t bother me.
Dialects are endearing.
But I just can’t write off “ex-specially” as a dialect.
To me it sounds like the mispronunciation of a child. We’ve all heard a 4 year old make such a mistake. It just sounds child-like more than anything else.
Ask yourself why you label some differences as dialects and some as mistakes. Is there a regional difference? Perhaps a racial or class difference? Your biases are coming out clearly in your post, even if you are blind to them.
Anonymous wrote:The ones that drive me crazy are:
Bafroom (bathroom)
Wif (with)
Warter (water)
Anonymous wrote:Why do so many people say “ex-specially”?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do so many people say “ex-specially”?
I want someone to do a PSA or YouTube tutorial coaching people on how to break it down and say it correctly.
Eh-specially.
No X.
I wish this didn’t bother me as much as it does.
It's the same reason people say expresso. It's called epenthesis. e + /sp/ is a spicy combo that's not very common in English, so speakers will shift to /ksp/ "ex" because it's easier to say and more familiar. English is full of these...feb-yoo-ary because "br" is a more challenging cluster. We learn words by ear first and sometimes those motor patterns become automatic long before spelling enters the picture.
There is nothing *difficult* for English speakers in the the e + sp sound. It's uncommon so many people make the mistake, but it's not difficult to pronounce (unlike February).