Difference between revisions of "Disillusion - dissolution"

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[[category:homophones]] [[category:pronunciation]]
 
[[category:homophones]] [[category:pronunciation]]
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[[category:fix IPA]]

Revision as of 16:40, 6 June 2007

Except in careful speech, these are homophones, and so a writer in a hurry can confuse them. (The careful speaker will voice the second ‘ si ’ in disillusion, with the same sound as in ‘confusion’ . The ‘ ti ’ in dissolution is unvoiced, like the sound in ‘attention’ .) It may help you to distinguish them to note their etymology.

  • To disillusion is a verb meaning ‘to take the illusion away from’. It is built from the prefix dis , which has one ‘ s ’, and the noun illusion, which does not start with ‘ s ’. So disillusion has only one ‘ s ’ in its first syllable. (The related noun is disillusionment.)
  • dissolution is a noun from the verb to dissolve. That in turn is built from dis (one ‘ s ’) and solve, which starts with ‘ s ’. So dissolution has two ‘ s ’s in the first syllable.