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ma, æquator, &c. ; but others have laid it aside, and write enigma, Cesar, Eneas, &c.

The diphthong ai has exactly the long slender sound of a; as in pail, tail, &c.; pronounced pale, tale, &c. : except plaid, again, raillery, fountain, Britain, and a few others.

Au is generally sounded like the broad a; as in taught, caught, &c. Sometimes like the short or open a: as in aunt, flaunt, gauntlet, &c. It has the sound of long o in hautboy; and that of o short in laurel, laudanum, &c, Aw has always the sound of broad a; as in bawl, scrawl, crawl.

Ay, like its near relation ai, is pronounced like the long slender sound of a; as in pay, day, delay.

B.

B keeps one unvaried sound, at the beginning, middle, and end of words; as in baker, number, rhubarb, &c. In some words it is silent; as in thumb, debtor, subtle, &c. In others, besides being silent, it lengthens the syllable; as in climb, comb, tomb.

C.

C has two different sounds.

A hard sound like k, before a, o, u, r, l,t ; as in cart, cottage, curious, craft, tract, cloth, &c. and when it ends a syllable; as, in victim, flaccid.

A soft sound like s, before e, i, and y, generally; as in centre, face, civil, cymbal, mercy, &c. It has some. times the sound of sh; as in ocean, social.

C is mute in Czar, Czarina, victuals, &c.

C, says Dr. Johnson, according to English orthography, never ends a word; and therefore we find in our best dictionaries, stick, block, publick, politick, &c. But many writers of later years omit the k in words of two or more syllables; and this practice is gaining ground, though it is productive of irregularities; such as writing mimic and mimickry; traffic and trafficking.

Ch is commonly sounded like tch: as in church, chin, chaff, charter: but in words derived from the Greek, has the sound of k; as in chymist, scheme, chorus, chyle, distich ; and in foreign names, as, Achish, Baruch. Enoch, &c

Ch, in some words derived from the French, takes the sound of sh; as in chaise, chagrin, chevalier, machine.

Ch in arch, before a vowel, sounds like k; as in archangel, archives, Archipelago, except in arched, archery, archer, and arch-enemy: but before a consonant it always sounds like teh; as in archbishop, archduke, archpresbyter, &c. Ch is silent in schedule, schism, and yacht.

D.

D keeps one uniform sound, at the beginning, middle, and end of words; as in death, bandage, kindred; unless it may be said to take the sound of t, in stuffed, tripped, &c. stuft, tript, &c.

E.

E has three different sounds.

A long sound; as in scheme, glebe, severe.
A short sound; as in men, bed, clemency.

An obscure and scarcely perceptible sound; as, operi, lucre, participle.

It has sometimes the sound of middle a: as in clerk, sergeant; and sometimes that of short i; as in England, yes, pretty.

E is always mute at the end of a word, except in monosyllables that have no other vowel; as me, he, she: or in substantives derived from the Greek; as, catastrophe, epitome, Penelope. It is used to soften and modify the foregoing consonants; as, force, rage, since, oblige: or to lengthen the preceding vowel as can, cane; pin, pine; rob, robe.

The diphthong ea is generally sounded like e long; as in appear, beaver, creature, &c. It has also the sound of short e; as in breath, meadow, treasure. And it is sometimes pronounced like the long and slender a; as in bear, break, great.

Eau has the sound of long o; as in beau, flambeau, portmanteau. In beauty and its compounds, it has the sound of long u.

Ei, in general, sounds the same as long and slender a; as in deign, vein, neighbour, &c. It has the sound of long e in seize, deceit, receive, either, neither, &c. It is sometimes pronounced like short i; as in foreign, forfeit, sovereign, &c.

Eo is pronounced like e long; as in people; and some

times like e short; as in leopard, jeopardy. It has also the sound of short u; as in dungeon, sturgeon, puncheon, &c. Eu is always sounded like long u or ew; as in feud, deuce.

Ew is almost always pronounced like long u; as in few, new, dew.

Ey, when the accent is on it, is always pronounced like a long as in bey, grey, convey; except in key, ley, where it is sounded like long e.

When this diphthong is unaccented, it takes the sound of e long; as alley, valley, barley.

F.

Fkeeps one pure unvaried sound at the beginning, middle, and end of words; as fancy, muffin, mischief, &c. : except in of, in which it has the flat sound of ov; but not in composition; as, whereof, thereof, &c. We should not pronounce a wive's jointure, a calve's head: but a wife's jointure, a calf's head.

G.

G has two sounds: one hard; as in gay, go, gun: the other soft; as in gem, giant.

At the end of a word it is always hard; as in bag, snug, frog. It is hard before a, o, u, l, and r ; as, game, gone, gull, glory, grandeur.

G before e, i, and y, is soft; as in genius, gesture, ginger, Egypt; except in get, gewgaw, finger, craggy, and some others.

G is mute before n; as in gnash, sign, foreign, &c.

Gn, at the end of a word, or syllable, accented, gives the preceding vowel a long sound; as in resign, impugn, oppugn, impregn, impugned; pronounced impune, im prene, &c.

Gh, at the beginning of a word, has the sound of the hard. g; as ghost, ghastly in the middle, and sometimes at the end, it is quite silent; as in right, high, plough, mighty.

At the end it has often the sound of f; as in laugh, cough, tough. Sometimes only the g is sounded as in burgh, burgher.

H.

The sound signified by this letter, is, as before observed, an articulate sound, and not merely an aspiration. It

is heard in the words hat, horse, hull. It is seldom mute at the beginning of a word. It is always silent after r; as, rhetorick, rheum, rhubarb.

H final, preceded by a vowel, is always silent; as, ah! hah! oh! foh! Sarah, Messiah.

From the faintness of the sound of this letter, in many words, and its total silence in others, added to the negli gence of tutors, and the inattention of pupils, it has happened, that many persons have become almost incapable of acquiring its just and full pronunciation. It is therefore incumbent on teachers, to be particularly careful to inculcate a clear and distinct utterance of this sound.

I.

I has a long sound; as in fine; and a short one; as in fin, The long sound is always marked by the e final in mo. nosyllables; as, thin, thine; except give, live. Before r it is often sounded like a short u; as, flirt, first. In some words it has the sound of e long; as in machine, bombazine, magazine.

The diphthong ia is frequently sounded like ya; as in christian, filial, poniard; pronounced christ-yan, &c. It bas sometimes the sound of short i; as in carriage, mar. riage, parliament.

le sounds in general like long: as in grief, thief, gre nadier. It has also the sound of longi; as in die, pie, lie; and sometimes that of short i; as, in sieve.

Teu has the sound of long u; as in lieu, adieu, purlieu. Io, when the accent is upon the first vowel, forms two distinct syllables; as priory, violet, violent. The terminations tion and sion, are sounded exactly like the verb shun; except when the t is preceded by s or x; as in question, digestion, combustion, mixtion, &c.

The triphthong iou is sometimes pronounced distinctly in two syllables; as in bilious, various, abstemious. But these vowels often coalesce into one syllable; as in pre cious, factious, noxious.

J.

J is pronounced exactly like soft g; except in Hallelu jah, where it is pronounced like 3.

K.

K has the sound of hard, and is used before e and i, where, according to English analogy, c would be soft; as

kept, king, skirts. It is not sounded before n; as in knife, knell, knocker. It is never doubled; except in Habakkuk; but c is used before it to shorten the vowel by a double consonant; as, cockle, pickle, sucker.

с

·L.

L has always a soft liquid sound; as in love, billow, quarrel. It is sometimes mute, as in half, talk, psalm. The custom is to double the / at the end of monosyllables; as, mill, will, fall; except where a diphthong precedes it; as, hail, toil, soil.

Le, at the end of words, is pronounced like a weak el; in which thee is almost mute; as, table, shuttle.

M.

M has always the same sound; as, murmur, monumental, except in comptroller, which is pronounced controller. N.

N has two sounds: the one pure; as in man, net, noble; the other a ringing sound like ng; as in thank, banquet, &c.

N is mute when it ends a syllable, and is preceded by m; as hymn, solemn, autumn.

The participle ing must always have its ringing sound; as, writing, reading, speaking. Some writers have supposed that when ing is preceded by ing, it should be pronounced in; as, singing, bringing, should be sounded singin, bringin: but as it is a good rule, with respect to pronunciation, to adhere to the written words, unless custom has clearly decided otherwise, it does not seem pro per to adopt this innovation.

0.

O has a long sound; as in note, bone, obedient, over : and a short one; as in noi, got, lot, trot.

It has sometimes the short sound of u; as, son, come, attorney. And in some words it is sounded like oo; as in prove, move, behove; and often like au; as in nor, for, lord.

The diphthong oa is regularly pronounced as the long sound of o; as in boat, oat, coal; except in broad, abroad, groat, where it takes the sound of broad a; as abrawd, &c.

Oe has the sound of single e. It is sometimes long; as in fœtus, Antæci: and sometimes short; as in œcono.

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