Advertising - LEO without ads? LEO Pur
LEO

It looks like you’re using an ad blocker.

Would you like to support LEO?

Disable your ad blocker for LEO or make a donation.

 
  •  
  • Forum home

    Language lab

    pronunciation "homogeneous" and heterogeneous"

    Topic

    pronunciation "homogeneous" and heterogeneous"

    Comment
    What is the correct pronunciation? I thought I knew, but have heard different versions recently IN "homogeneous" is the emphasis on the second "o" and is the "e" in "eous" pronounced or silent.
    Hope someone can help.
    Authoruna06 Oct 05, 15:36
    Comment
    http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?va=homo...

    http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Di...

    Ich breche mir mit der Ausprache dieser beiden Wörter auch immer einen ab (auch wenn ich sie schon hundert mal nachgeschlagen habe, kann ich mich beim besten willen nicht mehr daran erinnern, wie sie ausgesprochen werden). Hoffe die Merriam Links helfen
    #1AuthorDeepThought06 Oct 05, 15:41
    Comment
    @una:

    Wenn du sie

    ho-mo-ge-ni-us (homogeneous) bzw.
    het-e-ro-ge-ni-us (heterogeneous)

    aussprichst, wird man dich sicher verstehen! :o)

    Betont wird jeweis das -ge-
    #2AuthorFury06 Oct 05, 16:10
    Comment
    Homogeneous with an accent on the 2nd o and a silent e is actually "homogenous".
    Homogeneous has an accent on the first e.
    Roughly speaking, homogenous means similar everywhere and homogeneous means of a single type. Therefore the opposite of homogeneous is heterogeneous, but the opposite of homogenous is inconsistent or variable.
    #3AuthorPaul <uk>06 Oct 05, 16:12
    Comment
    i'd say homOgeneous (with the second e silent) and heterogeneous (with the last e silent) but I think americans would pronounce them differently - those e's wouldn't be silent.
    #4AuthorTim (english!)06 Oct 05, 16:15
    Comment
    Oh, actually Paul's probably right :-)
    #5AuthorTim06 Oct 05, 16:16
    Comment
    Thanks to all, erpecially Paul, I didn't know about homogenous and homogeneous. That makes things a lot clearer.
    #6Authoruna06 Oct 05, 16:49
    Comment
    yes, very interesting, I always thought that homogenous was the English word and homogeneous was American, but now I know!
    #7Authorjoe06 Oct 05, 16:55
    Comment
    What I have written is what I was taught.
    However the online dictionaries say that "homogenous" is a backformation of "homogenise" which means the same as "homogeneous". It therefore cannot be wrong to use homogenous to mean homogeneous.
    Has the dictionary changed since I was at university? I'm as confused as everyone else.
    #8AuthorPaul <uk>06 Oct 05, 17:19
     
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  
 
 
 
 
 ­ automatisch zu ­ ­ umgewandelt