I was in an argument with someone who is dead set on how to pronounce it as fer. As in "Hey I got this fer you", but it's still spelled the same just because the condentation it's used it's pronounced different. So OT, how do you say the word for?
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I was in an argument with someone who is dead set on how to pronounce it as fer. As in "Hey I got this fer you", but it's still spelled the same just because the condentation it's used it's pronounced different. So OT, how do you say the word for?
Both ways. The accent of some of my words change depending on what I'm saying, how fast I'm saying it, etc.
I do catch myself saying fer if i'm saying a sentence fast or something. But to literally think, it's fer but spelled for is really stupid. Just mispronunciation.
I say for like you're supposed tt say it: for. Who the heck says 'fer'? Are they too lazy to open their mouth?
Lol i'm glad there are serious responses but glad with the dumb ones. It's a serious question due to someone stupid saying fer like it's normal. MickeyTheNinja
What dumb ones? everyone is being serious about this as its such a serious topic
Both ways. Sometimes it depends on how fast I'm talking, what I'm talking about, or who I'm talking to.
For, 4, Fore, Four, Foar, F0r, **** Ma, Dizzle, ^4, {x-4}=5 {4x4^4}=4 {4x4^4+X6} X=4
How the hell can you say fer? That's like saying Fur.
4, although if I'm stringing a sentence and generally being informal I may hint towards fer. although that's not the correct pronunciation obvsly
That's what happens to me, and what that person believes is that it really is fer, and saying the drawn out word for is incorrect and hick like.4, although if I'm stringing a sentence and generally being informal I may hint towards fer. although that's not the correct pronunciation obvsly
Overlord93
From my understanding it can be either.
And not necessarily one way for one person and the other for another person.
Like anything dealing with a languages phonology, the phonological environment (as in which phonemes follow and which phonemes precede) matters.
So it can be (again from what I have observed) that a person will pronounce "for" differently in the two following examples:
- for me
- for you
And at the end of the day it could even be a matter of an idiolect: the peculiar way each person uses their language.
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