Assalamo allaikum
Have you ever wondered, when to pronounce the letter 'C' as 'K' and when to pronounce it as 'S'? - Well, here comes the answer.
There is NO 100% rule of it. What comes nearest to it is as following:
"C" normally has a /k/ sound if it somes before the letters a, o or u. (cat, cot, cut..) If it comes before e or i (or both) it is usually /s/ (centre, city.) This difference still applies no matter what comes after the initial letter. For instance, if you take a word like coin or cue, the sound is still /k/, based on the first vowel (o or u) - the fact that the NEXT letter is i or e makes no difference.
"C" is nearly always pronounced /k/ before a consonant. There aren't many consonants that will go after a c anyway - the ones you can use are l and r (clear, crash). The exception to this is h - if h is used after a c, it produces a /ch/ sound, as in church.
So c+ consonant never produces an /s/ sound.
Have you ever wondered, when to pronounce the letter 'C' as 'K' and when to pronounce it as 'S'? - Well, here comes the answer.
There is NO 100% rule of it. What comes nearest to it is as following:
"C" normally has a /k/ sound if it somes before the letters a, o or u. (cat, cot, cut..) If it comes before e or i (or both) it is usually /s/ (centre, city.) This difference still applies no matter what comes after the initial letter. For instance, if you take a word like coin or cue, the sound is still /k/, based on the first vowel (o or u) - the fact that the NEXT letter is i or e makes no difference.
"C" is nearly always pronounced /k/ before a consonant. There aren't many consonants that will go after a c anyway - the ones you can use are l and r (clear, crash). The exception to this is h - if h is used after a c, it produces a /ch/ sound, as in church.
So c+ consonant never produces an /s/ sound.
Comment