american english - Pronunciation of "i" in the words like "direct", "organization", etc
I'm a nonnative speaker of English and I've always been unsure about the pronunciation of "i" inside words like direct, organization, etc. I was thinking that it's a matter of choice between American and British usage to pronounce that "i" as ɪ
or aɪ
, or even ə
, but looking at some dictionaries made the situation more complex for me. For instance, MacMillan dictionary gives the American English pronunciation of "indirect" as
/ˌɪndɪˈrekt/
/ˌɪndaɪˈrekt/
whereas the British English pronunciation is given as
/ˌɪndəˈrekt/
/ˌɪndaɪˈrekt/
So both of them include two versions and ɪndaɪrekt
in common. I thought that only British English had ɪndaɪrekt
.
The same dictionary given the pronunciation of "organization" as /ˌɔrɡənɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n/
for American English and /ˌɔː(r)ɡənaɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n/
for British English.
Is there a prevailing rule in international English for this kind of pronunciation? What do native speakers think and suggest?
Answer
As far as I'm aware, this is essentially a US vs. UK difference. Other examples where UK English has a /aɪ/ vowel and US English has a schwa include "missile", "volatile", "hostile", etc. which in the US effectively tend to be pronounced as through written "mis(t)le", "volatle", "hostle", etc.
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