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Comments on Why is it "pronunciation" and not "pronounciation"?

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Why is it "pronunciation" and not "pronounciation"?

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Generally speaking, when adding a suffix to a word in English, while the last letter(s) may undergo changes to accommodate the addition, the rest of the word is left unchanged. As examples in that sentence alone – general/generally, speak/speaking, add/adding/addition, change/changes/unchanged.

The only exception off the top of my head is the word pronounce. Nearly all of its variations — pronouncing, pronounced, pronounceable, pronouncement — all maintain the spelling of the word, save for the final e. However, one of its noun forms is pronunciation, where the central ⟨ou⟩ vowel is swapped out for a ⟨u⟩. Is there a historical reason why specifically the word pronunciation has its central vowel changed, among all of the forms of the word pronounce? Are there any other words in English which exhibit this phenomenon for the same reason?

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+4
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Moshi has explained it excellently. In fact, Trisyllabic Laxing is the reason it happened. I'm going to explain it from another point of view.

Pronounce is stressed on the second syllable. When the suffix -tion is appended to it, the primary stress moves to the syllable prior to the suffix -tion.
Whenever a word ends with -tion, it's usually stressed on the penultimate.

The [aʊ] diphthong that you hear in the word 'pronounce' has a systematic relationship with the [ʌ] vowel (as in the word 'strut'). It's also explained in Trisyllabic Laxing.

When we add syllables, the vowels get laxed (get shortened) and the [aʊ] is likely to change to the [ʌ] vowel.

Therefore, when we add the suffix -tion to the word 'pronounce', the primary stress moves to the penult and we get the [ʌ] vowel in the second syllable of pronuncation.

Other examples include annunciation, profundity, renunciation etc.

Why does the O get removed from the second syllable of 'pronunciation'?

Because we have the [ʌ] vowel in the second syllable and the digraph <ou> in modern English does not often represent the [ʌ] vowel. So we remove the O to match the spelling and pronunciation.

Hope it helps!

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General comments (3 comments)
General comments
Conrado‭ wrote about 4 years ago

Hi, Decap. This would be the first question for you to answer... Cheers!

curiousdannii‭ wrote about 4 years ago

What evidence do you have that this is actually what happened? Wiktionary's etymologies for both words show that they came from different French words, both of which were already short vowels. So don't we really need an explanation for how pronounce came to have a long vowel?

nobodyImportant‭ wrote about 4 years ago

@curiousdannii: What evidence do you have that the etymologies given by Wikitionary are correct and not edited by someone who doesn't know anything about Etymology?