A Pronunciation Poem
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| I take it you already know |
| Of tough and bough and cough and dough? |
| Others may stumble but not you, |
| On hiccough, thorough, lough and through? |
| Well done! And now you wish perhaps, |
| To know of less familiar traps. |
| Beware of heard, a dreadful word |
| That looks like beard but sounds like bird, |
| And dead: it’s said like in bed, not bead - |
| For goodness sake don’t call it “deed”! |
| Watch out for meat and great and threat |
| (They rhyme with suite and straight and debt) |
| And moth is not a moth in mother, |
| Nor both in bother, broth in brother, |
| And here is not a match for there, |
| Nor dear and fear for bear and pear, |
| And then there’s dose and rose and lose - |
| Just look them up – and goose and choose, |
| And cork and work, and card and ward, |
| And font and front, and word and sword, |
| And do and go and thwart and cart - |
| Come come, I’ve hardly made a start! |
| A dreadful language? Man alive! |
| I’d mastered it when I was five! |
|
Anon. |
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