Question about the word "Buried"

Atlas14

"Sophomoric Troll Master"
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How is the word "buried" supposed to be pronounced? I always tell my best friend it is supposed to be pronounced "burr-eed" while he insists the correct pronounciation is "berried". How do you say it, and which one is correct? This will settle 5 years of arguing between us. Thanks. :)
 
I think the correct pronounciation is 'berried'. I've never heard 'burr-ied' before
 
I think the correct pronounciation is 'berried'.

Darn.

I've never heard 'burr-ied' before

Hopefully it is not something my dad just made-up himself. He always used to correct me and my mom if we said "berried", so I guess I've had it ingrained in me since I was very young that "burr-ied" was the way to say it, and I've been wrong the entire time.
 
I vote berried too. You "berry" something rather than "burry" it AFAIK, never heard anyone say "Burry". Even Bury St Edmonds as a platform announcement has Berry. English has soooooo many words that are spelled the differently and pronounced the same, and are not spelled remotely like they are pronounced, or bits that are spelled the same and pronounced differently.
Also - Dictionary.com seems to agree with me - have a look at http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=bury and check the pronunciation key.
 
It's "Berry", but I think I've heard both, too. I guess it depends on what part of town (or nation) you come from.
 
I always said berry and changed it to burried when using the past tense.
 
I'm pretty sure you pronouce it "berried".
 
This has actually been researched extensively in socio-linguistics. In some parts of the U.S. (the Mid-Atlantic, mostly), there is no difference in spoken "Murray" vs. "merry". The data also shows a disparity in people's opinions of how well they pronounce the words. Most Philadelphians who don't make a distiction in the sound, for example, will judge their own pronunciations of the two words to be distinct even when the interviewer judges them to be identical.

Much of the confusion in this particular environment (where there is an 'r' in the coda (i.e., the part of a syllable that comes after a vowel)) is due to the peculiarities of 'r' in English. There are no other European languages with an identical sound, and the only other widely spoken language that has it as a coda is Mandarin (where it is comparatively rare). The tendency for a speaker of English is to reduce a short vowel that comes before an 'r' in the coda, and in some cases this leads to the complete absence of any segment other than 'r' (this makes it the syllable peak).

To answer Atlas' question, I pronounce it "burr-eed" (your provided phonetic transcription) in casual speech, but I wouldn't take speech advice from a Philadelphian, even a Philadelphian linguist ;).
 
Buurrried sounds far less ********.

Berried is similar to libary. And libary is just stupid.

I agree. I guess it merely depends on your region which one is accepted as the "correct" pronounciation.

This has actually been researched extensively in socio-linguistics. In some parts of the U.S. (the Mid-Atlantic, mostly), there is no difference in spoken "Murray" vs. "merry". The data also shows a disparity in people's opinions of how well they pronounce the words. Most Philadelphians who don't make a distiction in the sound, for example, will judge their own pronunciations of the two words to be distinct even when the interviewer judges them to be identical.

Much of the confusion in this particular environment (where there is an 'r' in the coda (i.e., the part of a syllable that comes after a vowel)) is due to the peculiarities of 'r' in English. There are no other European languages with an identical sound, and the only other widely spoken language that has it as a coda is Mandarin (where it is comparatively rare). The tendency for a speaker of English is to reduce a short vowel that comes before an 'r' in the coda, and in some cases this leads to the complete absence of any segment other than 'r' (this makes it the syllable peak).

Hmmm. Very interesting. Seems like those who pronounce it "berried" outnumber us "burr-ied" folks.
 
I pronounce it berried, but i would think the proper use would burr-ied
 
If you're American you can pronounce it however you like, but if you'd like to speak properly then it rhymes with "ferried".
 
bad_ronald said:
This has actually been researched extensively in socio-linguistics. In some parts of the U.S. (the Mid-Atlantic, mostly), there is no difference in spoken "Murray" vs. "merry". The data also shows a disparity in people's opinions of how well they pronounce the words. Most Philadelphians who don't make a distiction in the sound, for example, will judge their own pronunciations of the two words to be distinct even when the interviewer judges them to be identical.

Much of the confusion in this particular environment (where there is an 'r' in the coda (i.e., the part of a syllable that comes after a vowel)) is due to the peculiarities of 'r' in English. There are no other European languages with an identical sound, and the only other widely spoken language that has it as a coda is Mandarin (where it is comparatively rare). The tendency for a speaker of English is to reduce a short vowel that comes before an 'r' in the coda, and in some cases this leads to the complete absence of any segment other than 'r' (this makes it the syllable peak).

To answer Atlas' question, I pronounce it "burr-eed" (your provided phonetic transcription) in casual speech, but I wouldn't take speech advice from a Philadelphian, even a Philadelphian linguist ;).

Ah, another person interested in the Philadelphia accent. In case you haven't seen it (and, if you have, its for other people), check out this link

For me, its a little weird, in that I don't pronounce "Merry" in "Merry Christmas" like "Murry" (although many of my relatives do). For Burried, I usually say "berried", but there are times I say "burried".

It does depend a lot on where you are from. IMO, there is no "right way" and "wrong way" to pronounce a word (some ways are hard to understand, though ;) ).

When you say how you pronounce it, it might help if you say where you were from. For me, I grew up in the Philadelphia Suburbs.
 
I think it's a regional thing. If you were from Bury (Lancashire, North West England)or roundabouts then you would say burried. I can't think of a satisfying conclusion to this point.
 
Berried, Never even heard the first one before. And trust my pronunciation, I am from the Midwest we talk like the people on TV here.
 
Louis XXIV said:
Ah, another person interested in the Philadelphia accent. In case you haven't seen it (and, if you have, its for other people), check out this link
Haven't seen it! I've had Labov as a professor twice, and it's entirely possible that some of the data referenced in the article was collected by none other than yours truly :).

It does depend a lot on where you are from. IMO, there is no "right way" and "wrong way" to pronounce a word (some ways are hard to understand, though ;) ).
Exactly.

When you say how you pronounce it, it might help if you say where you were from. For me, I grew up in the Philadelphia Suburbs.
Northeast Philly, Mayfair, specifically.
 
I use both interchangeably, but I grew up in Baltimore.
 
bad_ronald said:
Haven't seen it! I've had Labov as a professor twice, and it's entirely possible that some of the data referenced in the article was collected by none other than yours truly :).

Cool :cool: What you were saying sounding a lot like the article, so I figured you either had to have read it, or been an expert in it ;)
 
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