Why is 'know' pronounced as 'no'?
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I know the 'k' is silent, but then why not pronounced as 'now' instead of 'no'?
P.S. I realize it's a stupid question, just felt curious about this.
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I know the 'k' is silent, but then why not pronounced as 'now' instead of 'no'?
P.S. I realize it's a stupid question, just felt curious about this.
pronunciation
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Consider low, show, flow, stow, grow, throw. The digraph ow has two common pronunciations, and there's really no way of telling which one any particular English word has (and in fact, in bow, mow, sow, it's ambiguous because the same spelling is used for two different words with different pronunciations).
– Peter Shor
1 hour ago
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Duplicate of english.stackexchange.com/questions/6588/…
– Ddddan
1 hour ago
Possible duplicate of Why does "ow" have two different sounds
– TimLymington
1 hour ago
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up vote
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down vote
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I know the 'k' is silent, but then why not pronounced as 'now' instead of 'no'?
P.S. I realize it's a stupid question, just felt curious about this.
pronunciation
New contributor
I know the 'k' is silent, but then why not pronounced as 'now' instead of 'no'?
P.S. I realize it's a stupid question, just felt curious about this.
pronunciation
pronunciation
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 1 hour ago
Vivek Sinha
1
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Consider low, show, flow, stow, grow, throw. The digraph ow has two common pronunciations, and there's really no way of telling which one any particular English word has (and in fact, in bow, mow, sow, it's ambiguous because the same spelling is used for two different words with different pronunciations).
– Peter Shor
1 hour ago
1
Duplicate of english.stackexchange.com/questions/6588/…
– Ddddan
1 hour ago
Possible duplicate of Why does "ow" have two different sounds
– TimLymington
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Consider low, show, flow, stow, grow, throw. The digraph ow has two common pronunciations, and there's really no way of telling which one any particular English word has (and in fact, in bow, mow, sow, it's ambiguous because the same spelling is used for two different words with different pronunciations).
– Peter Shor
1 hour ago
1
Duplicate of english.stackexchange.com/questions/6588/…
– Ddddan
1 hour ago
Possible duplicate of Why does "ow" have two different sounds
– TimLymington
1 hour ago
Consider low, show, flow, stow, grow, throw. The digraph ow has two common pronunciations, and there's really no way of telling which one any particular English word has (and in fact, in bow, mow, sow, it's ambiguous because the same spelling is used for two different words with different pronunciations).
– Peter Shor
1 hour ago
Consider low, show, flow, stow, grow, throw. The digraph ow has two common pronunciations, and there's really no way of telling which one any particular English word has (and in fact, in bow, mow, sow, it's ambiguous because the same spelling is used for two different words with different pronunciations).
– Peter Shor
1 hour ago
1
1
Duplicate of english.stackexchange.com/questions/6588/…
– Ddddan
1 hour ago
Duplicate of english.stackexchange.com/questions/6588/…
– Ddddan
1 hour ago
Possible duplicate of Why does "ow" have two different sounds
– TimLymington
1 hour ago
Possible duplicate of Why does "ow" have two different sounds
– TimLymington
1 hour ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
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Sometime during 17th and 18th century, initial k and g sounds in consonant clusters that were originally pronounced, were systematically reduced, like in know, knight, and gnaw. There's no real reason as to why it is pronounced as 'no' instead of 'now' except for that that is what the word is, and it is analogous to other words like low, show, flow, stow, etc. as pointed out in one of the comments.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active
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active
oldest
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up vote
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Sometime during 17th and 18th century, initial k and g sounds in consonant clusters that were originally pronounced, were systematically reduced, like in know, knight, and gnaw. There's no real reason as to why it is pronounced as 'no' instead of 'now' except for that that is what the word is, and it is analogous to other words like low, show, flow, stow, etc. as pointed out in one of the comments.
add a comment |
up vote
0
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Sometime during 17th and 18th century, initial k and g sounds in consonant clusters that were originally pronounced, were systematically reduced, like in know, knight, and gnaw. There's no real reason as to why it is pronounced as 'no' instead of 'now' except for that that is what the word is, and it is analogous to other words like low, show, flow, stow, etc. as pointed out in one of the comments.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Sometime during 17th and 18th century, initial k and g sounds in consonant clusters that were originally pronounced, were systematically reduced, like in know, knight, and gnaw. There's no real reason as to why it is pronounced as 'no' instead of 'now' except for that that is what the word is, and it is analogous to other words like low, show, flow, stow, etc. as pointed out in one of the comments.
Sometime during 17th and 18th century, initial k and g sounds in consonant clusters that were originally pronounced, were systematically reduced, like in know, knight, and gnaw. There's no real reason as to why it is pronounced as 'no' instead of 'now' except for that that is what the word is, and it is analogous to other words like low, show, flow, stow, etc. as pointed out in one of the comments.
answered 2 mins ago
eenbeetje
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Vivek Sinha is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Vivek Sinha is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Vivek Sinha is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Vivek Sinha is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Consider low, show, flow, stow, grow, throw. The digraph ow has two common pronunciations, and there's really no way of telling which one any particular English word has (and in fact, in bow, mow, sow, it's ambiguous because the same spelling is used for two different words with different pronunciations).
– Peter Shor
1 hour ago
1
Duplicate of english.stackexchange.com/questions/6588/…
– Ddddan
1 hour ago
Possible duplicate of Why does "ow" have two different sounds
– TimLymington
1 hour ago