I have been listening to a podcast where the host pronounces the word solder as "sodder" or "sod-der", even "saw-der". Same thing happened when the lecturer of one of my EE classes pronounced the word solder. As for me I pronounce the word solder as "sole-der" with a distinct L and a longish O.
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After living in the US for 25 years, I can't think of any word that is harder to get into my transatlantic brogue than "sodder". I actually do prefer the subtler sound of the American form — my ear appreciates it, but I hesitate to imitate it. I also sign on to the notion that it's one of the many, many words whose original meaning or pronunciation the wayward British have forgotten. |
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In my accent (inland Cascadian English, in the northwestern United States), we say [sɑɾɚ], as "saw-der," to rhyme with "water." It looks like it should be pronounced [sɔldɚ] or similar, as "sole-der," to rhyme with "colder," and it may be pronounced that way elsewhere. And, yes, to make that perfectly clear: in my accent, solder rhymes with water. That seems so bizarre now that I really think about it. |
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I have heard both soul-der and sol-der with a long and short 'o', sometimes the 'o' is so short you lose the 'l' In BE the long 'o' is possibly more common |
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Whether or not to vocalize the 'l' in 'solder' seems to be a geographical issue. Lionel Deimel has a nice article on words with silent 'l's. Along with 'solder', he offers many other English words with silent 'l's, including:
Some readers will argue that many of the words in Deimel's list have vocalized 'l's, but, like 'solder', this is probably related to geography. |
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This doesn't come from a dictionary, but I had a relative who spent most of his free designing clever circuits (from the 1920s onwards). He always told me that the correct British pronunciation was "sodder", but that over the years it had started to be pronounced "solder" - which he believed was to avoid the embarrassment of a word that could be misinterpreted as being related to sodomy when speaking to people who didn't have a background in electronics (or pipework!). He was a very respectable man with a very good knowledge of the English language and how it had evolved during the 20th century - and at least one of his electronicly minded friends also pronounced it "sodder". Depending on your opinion of natural language, and if you should stick to more traditional, or modern, pronunciations either could therefore be correct. |
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Merriam Webster dictionary gives: Middle English soudure, from Anglo-French, from souder to solder, from Latin solidare to make solid, from solidus solid First Known Use: 14th century |
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The OED gives two pronunciations: |ˈsɒldə(r)| and |ˈsəʊdə(r)| On WordReference.com, the latter is given as U.S. pronunciation. While on the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary they are both given as BrE, while for AmE we have a new one: |ˈsɑːdər|. Here you can check them all out personally, audio included. |
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Depends on if you are British or American. The British say sole-der. Americans say sod-der (for some reason). |
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