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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 8, 2014 is:
epenthesis \ih-PEN-thuh-sis\ noun
: the insertion or development of a sound or letter in the body of a word
Examples:
The "b" in the adjective "nimble" is the result of epenthesis; in Middle English, the word was spelled "nimel."
"When Yogi Bear talks about swiping 'pick-a-nick' baskets in Jellystone Park, it sounds as if he's just having fun, but he's also demonstrating 'epenthesis,' inserting a vowel to avoid the consonants bumping up against each other." - Ruth Walker, The Christian Science Monitor, August 15, 2012
Did you know?
If you say "film" as "FIL-um," with two syllables, you've committed epenthesis. It isn't a punishable offense-in fact, it's not an offense at all. It is simply a natural way to break up an awkward cluster of consonants. It's easier for some people to say "film" as two syllables instead of one, just as it's easier for some to insert a "b" sound into "cummerbund," pronouncing that word as "CUM-ber-bund."
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word of the daywebsterwordsvocabularyword a daydictionarymerriam-websterenglishwordlanguagemerriam