User: Drosophilist Subscribe to Drosophilist pronunciations
User profile: information, words and pronunciations.
| Date | Word | Listen | Votes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010-03-04 | isonitriles [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-03-04 | Tetralogy of Fallot [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-11 | Wiarton [en] | 2 votes ![]() |
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| 2010-02-11 | Solsbury Hill [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-11 | lateralus [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-11 | brachiocephalis [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-11 | Quenneville [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-04 | Jon Eakes [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-04 | McEwen [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-04 | cowshed [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-02-03 | Morshead [en] | 1 votes ![]() |
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| 2010-02-03 | Holy Sepulchre [en] | 1 votes ![]() |
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| 2010-01-27 | microflora [en] | 1 votes ![]() |
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| 2010-01-27 | weaning [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-27 | sebaceous [en] | 1 votes ![]() |
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| 2010-01-27 | piloerector [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-27 | reflector [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-27 | rehydrating [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-27 | referenced [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-25 | Kary Mullis [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-25 | flip over [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-25 | monopteron [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-25 | dolichocephalic [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-25 | cliché [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-22 | Albertan [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-22 | Holocene [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-22 | Mississippian [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-22 | Miocene [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-22 | Paleoproterozoic [en] | 0 votes | |
| 2010-01-22 | Mesoproterozoic [en] | 0 votes |
User's info
Born and raised in Toronto, Canada in 1971. I have a Ph.D in biological sciences, specifically genetics and cell biology.
I try to pronounce words as I would in everyday speech rather than fully enunciated. I speak with a West/Central Canadian accent. It is rhotic (final "R" pronounced), I pronounce cot-caught and Mary-merry-marry the same. I also speak with a Canadian Rising -- the vowel sound of "house" and "houses" is different and is the source of the amusing (yet incorrect) belief that Canadians pronounce "out and about" as "oot and aboot"; Wikipedia has a good article on this.

