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  1. Dictionary
    Key
    /kē/

    noun

    • 1. a small piece of shaped metal with incisions cut to fit the wards of a particular lock, which is inserted into a lock and turned to open or close it: "there were two keys to the cupboard"
    • 2. each of several buttons on a panel for operating a computer, typewriter, or telephone: "press the ENTER key"

    adjective

    • 1. of paramount or crucial importance: "she became a key figure in the suffragette movement"

    verb

    • 1. enter or operate on (data) by means of a computer keyboard or telephone keypad: "not everyone can key data quickly and accurately"
    • 2. fasten (something) in position with a pin, wedge, or bolt: "the coils may be keyed into the slots by fiber wedges"
  2. A key to understanding the pronunciation of dictionary words. ... This pronunciation key outlines how to pronounce the letters and symbols in these systems, with ...

  3. Weak vowels, e.g., the final vowels in words such as added and beautiful, are typically not as high as in British English. Weak vowels in words such as added tend towards schwa except where the most recent preceding vowel ended high and front ( /i, ɪ, eɪ, aɪ, ɔɪ/ ), in which case /ɪ/ might be found, or more often a quality on the ɪ-ə ...

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  5. tle,cotton, and one pronunciation of open \‡‰-p«m\ and of and \«−\ as in one pronunciation of the phrase lock and key \…läk-«−-‡k⁄\. The symbol \«\ preceding these consonants does not itself represent a sound. It signifies in-stead that the following consonant is syllabic; that is, the

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  6. Get thousands of audio pronunciations of English; hear words pronounced in both British and American English

  7. Pronunciation Key for Free Online Dictionary (Key to Pronunciation Symbols) ... forest, and horrid, where the pronunciation of o before r varies between (ô) and (ŏ ...

  8. The Dictionary.com Unabridged IPA Pronunciation Key IPA is an International Phonetic Alphabet intended for all speakers. Pronunciations on Dictionary.com use a subset of IPA to describe mainly the sounds of English. This chart will tell you how to read the pronunciation symbols. Stress marks: In IPA, /ˈ/ indicates that the primary stressed syllable follows and /ˌ/ indicates the secondary ...

  9. Finally, the above table includes two accepted nasalized vowels in the British English model, /ã/ (as in gratin) and /ɒ̃/ (as in bouillon ). Nasalized vowels are exclusively found within loan words that have not become fully naturalized in English, but where anglicization is evident and speakers are not code-switching.

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