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15 English Words You're Definitely Mispronouncing (And How to Fix Them)

Publicado el 5 de diciembre de 2025
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Some English words are pronunciation nightmares. They look nothing like they sound, have silent letters, or stress patterns that defy logic. Here are 15 words that Spanish speakers almost always mispronounce—and exactly how to fix each one.

The Silent Letter Trap

1. Wednesday

Wrong: "Wed-NES-day" (3 syllables)
Right: "WENZ-day" /ˈwenzdeɪ/ (2 syllables)

The "d" in the middle is completely silent. Don't even try to pronounce it.

2. February

Wrong: "Feb-RU-a-ry" (4 syllables, pronouncing both R's)
Right: "FEB-yu-er-ee" /ˈfebjuˌeri/ OR "FEB-ru-er-ee" /ˈfebruˌeri/

The first R is often dropped in American English. Both pronunciations are acceptable, but the "FEB-yu-ary" version is more common in casual speech.

3. Salmon

Wrong: "SAL-mon" (pronouncing the L)
Right: "SA-mon" /ˈsæmən/

The L is completely silent. It's pronounced exactly like "SAM-un."

4. Receipt

Wrong: "re-CEIPT" (pronouncing the P)
Right: "re-SEET" /rɪˈsiːt/

The P is silent. Just like "deceit" and "conceit."

5. Subtle

Wrong: "SUB-tul" (pronouncing the B)
Right: "SUT-ul" /ˈsʌtl/

The B is silent. Think of it as "suttle."

The Syllable Reduction Problem

English loves to "eat" syllables. These words have fewer syllables than they appear to have.

6. Comfortable

Wrong: "com-for-TA-ble" (4 syllables)
Right: "KUMF-ter-bul" /ˈkʌmftərbəl/ (3 syllables)

The "or" nearly disappears. Native speakers say "KUMF-ter-bul" or even "KUMF-tuh-bul."

7. Vegetable

Wrong: "ve-ge-TA-ble" (4 syllables)
Right: "VEJ-tuh-bul" /ˈvedʒtəbəl/ (3 syllables)

The second syllable almost disappears. "VEJ-tuh-bul."

8. Chocolate

Wrong: "cho-co-LA-te" (4 syllables)
Right: "CHOK-lit" /ˈtʃɑːklət/ (2 syllables)

It's only two syllables! The "o-la" in the middle gets compressed into almost nothing.

9. Interesting

Wrong: "in-te-REST-ing" (4 syllables)
Right: "IN-trest-ing" or "IN-ter-est-ing" /ˈɪntrəstɪŋ/ (3-4 syllables)

The "e" after "t" often disappears in casual speech: "IN-trest-ing."

10. Family

Wrong: "fa-MI-ly" (3 equal syllables)
Right: "FAM-lee" /ˈfæmli/ (2 syllables)

The middle syllable disappears completely. It's "FAM-lee," not "fa-mi-lee."

The Stress Shift Problem

These words have stress patterns that differ from what Spanish speakers expect.

11. Hotel

Wrong: "HO-tel" (stress on first syllable, like Spanish)
Right: "ho-TEL" /hoʊˈtel/ (stress on second syllable)

Unlike Spanish, English stresses the second syllable: "ho-TEL."

12. Police

Wrong: "PO-lice" (stress on first syllable)
Right: "puh-LEECE" /pəˈliːs/ (stress on second syllable)

The first syllable is reduced to a schwa: "puh-LEECE."

13. Magazine

Wrong: "ma-ga-ZINE" (stress on last syllable)
Right: "MAG-uh-zeen" /ˈmæɡəziːn/ (stress on first syllable)

American English stresses the first syllable. British English may stress the last.

The Vowel Surprise

14. Colonel

Wrong: "co-LO-nel" (pronouncing as spelled)
Right: "KER-nul" /ˈkɜːrnəl/

This is one of English's most bizarre spellings. It's pronounced exactly like "kernel" (the seed part of corn).

15. Clothes

Wrong: "clo-THES" (two syllables, pronouncing TH-ES)
Right: "klohz" /kloʊz/ (one syllable, like "close")

Many native speakers pronounce this exactly like "close" (to shut). The TH is often barely audible or dropped entirely. At most, it's one syllable: "klohz" or "klohthz."

Bonus: Words With Unexpected Sounds

Choir

Wrong: "CHO-ir" (like "choice")
Right: "KWY-er" /ˈkwaɪər/

It sounds like "acquire" without the "ac." The "ch" makes a K sound.

Queue

Wrong: "kwe-WE" or "kwe-WU"
Right: "kyoo" /kjuː/

All those vowels, and it's just pronounced like the letter "Q."

Entrepreneur

Wrong: "en-tre-pre-NEUR" (pronouncing every syllable clearly)
Right: "on-truh-pruh-NUR" /ˌɑːntrəprəˈnɜːr/

French loanword. The stress is on the last syllable, and the middle syllables are reduced.

Hierarchy

Wrong: "hi-er-AR-chy" (4 clear syllables)
Right: "HY-rar-kee" /ˈhaɪərɑːrki/ (3-4 syllables)

Stress the first syllable, and reduce "er" to almost nothing.

Practice Strategy

Step 1: Listen First

Before trying to say a word, listen to it multiple times. Use online dictionaries with audio (like Cambridge or Merriam-Webster).

Step 2: Break It Down

Count the actual syllables native speakers use—it's often fewer than the spelling suggests.

Step 3: Exaggerate

When practicing, exaggerate the correct pronunciation. Say "WENZ-day" really emphasizing that there are only two syllables.

Step 4: Record Yourself

Record yourself saying the word, then compare to a native speaker recording. Adjust and repeat.

Quick Reference Card

WordWrongRightTip
WednesdayWed-NES-dayWENZ-daySilent D
salmonSAL-monSA-munSilent L
comfortablecom-for-TA-bleKUMF-ter-bul3 syllables, not 4
chocolatecho-co-LA-teCHOK-lit2 syllables only
vegetableve-ge-TA-bleVEJ-tuh-bul3 syllables
clothesclo-THESklohz1 syllable like "close"
colonelco-LO-nelKER-nulSounds like "kernel"
receiptre-CEIPTre-SEETSilent P
subtleSUB-tulSUT-ulSilent B
hotelHO-telho-TELStress on 2nd syllable

Why English Spelling Is So Confusing

English spelling was standardized in the 1400s-1500s, but pronunciation kept changing. Plus, English borrowed words from dozens of languages (French, Latin, Greek, Norse) and often kept their original spellings. That's why "colonel" comes from Italian/French and is pronounced nothing like it's spelled.

The good news: once you learn these patterns, you'll start to recognize them in other words too.

Want to master more tricky English sounds? Explore our interactive pronunciation exercises.

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