K (letter): Difference between revisions

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Thus the '''ck''' combination does not occur after long vowels - you don’t see *-êeck, *-oôck, *-orck, *-àrck etc.
Thus the '''ck''' combination does not occur after long vowels - you don’t see *-êeck, *-oôck, *-orck, *-àrck etc.


And similarly, final '''k''' on its own is rare, and foreign-looking, after a single vowel: '''trék, flák, wók'''.
And similarly, final '''k''' on its own is rare, and imported-looking, after a single vowel: '''trék, flák, wók'''.


'''c''' or ck are generally used instead of k when forming clusters, with the exception of wóks etc. and of kl as in boòklet, especially in nkl (nk is pronounced ngk: sínk, thínk, tánk): ánkle (cf. úncle), wínkle, ínkling, tínkle, tínkling.
'''c''' or '''ck''' are generally used instead of '''k''' when forming clusters, with the exception of '''wóks''' etc. and of '''kl''' as in '''boòklet''', especially in nkl (nk is pronounced ngk: sínk, thínk, tánk): ánkle (cf. úncle), wínkle, ínkling, tínkle, tínkling.


Silent k occurs initially before n: knôw acquaint, understand (= nô negative), kneŵ acquainted (= neŵ fresh), knôwn (cf. nòne), knîght ''Sir'' (= nîght ''dark''), knít, knáck, knóck, knéll, knóll, knâve ''cad'' (= nâve ''church'').
Silent k occurs initially before n: knôw acquaint, understand (= nô negative), kneŵ acquainted (= neŵ fresh), knôwn (cf. nòne), knîght ''Sir'' (= nîght ''dark''), knít, knáck, knóck, knéll, knóll, knâve ''cad'' (= nâve ''church'').

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K is the eleventh letter of the English alphabet. Its name is pronounced like the girl's name Kay.

Use in English

k has the sound of c in cát or q in quîte. Examples (the accents show stress and pronunciation: see English phonemes): Ként, kéttle, kítsch, loòk, tâke, toòk, lâke, báck, dóck, bríck, åwkward (*åwquəd), hácker.

c is more common for this sound at the beginning of a word - and it can also be written ch as in chŏrd, álchemy, schoôner.

At the end of a word, k is usual after a double or long vowel, and after l, n and r: pêak, mâke, sínk, boòk, tánk, thánk, àrk, bàrk, sínk, mínk, mílk, tålk, jërk, quïrk, wörk, përk, lürk, Türk, besërk.

The l in fôlk is silent (as it is also in hālf and cālf).

Final -ke can have a touch of the colloquial: blôke, nûke (abbreviation of nûclear), bîke (of bîcycle), Jâke (of Jâcob), jûkebox.

Also: tâke, brâke car = breâk broken.

After c, k merely reinforces the hard c sound and the preceding short vowel: clóck (*clók *clóc), lúck, súck, néck, báck, thíck, blóck wood (= blóc nations), tíck clock (= tíc spasm, which has no k because it is, like blóc, from French), tíckle, crícket, wícket, tícket, níckel, ríckety, búcket. And so k is added to the ending -ic before suffixes -ing and -ed: politícking, tráfficking, frólicked, pánicked.

Thus the ck combination does not occur after long vowels - you don’t see *-êeck, *-oôck, *-orck, *-àrck etc.

And similarly, final k on its own is rare, and imported-looking, after a single vowel: trék, flák, wók.

c or ck are generally used instead of k when forming clusters, with the exception of wóks etc. and of kl as in boòklet, especially in nkl (nk is pronounced ngk: sínk, thínk, tánk): ánkle (cf. úncle), wínkle, ínkling, tínkle, tínkling.

Silent k occurs initially before n: knôw acquaint, understand (= nô negative), kneŵ acquainted (= neŵ fresh), knôwn (cf. nòne), knîght Sir (= nîght dark), knít, knáck, knóck, knéll, knóll, knâve cad (= nâve church).

kh is the sound of ch in lóch in words from Arabic, Urdu &c - although many people merely pronounce it k: Khàn (*Kàn).

kk is very rare. It occurs in púkka and Dékker and accidentally, with an extended k sound, in boòkkeeper.

See also