Warship is pronounced like worship, but worship is not pronounced like warship.
Warship is pronounced like worship, but worship is not pronounced like warship.
Warship “wor ship” and worship “wur ship”.
That depends on the accent, tbh.
In my area, the ship on the sea is more like whar or wahr, and worship is more were-ship as in "it were a ship for war", and not a person that changes into a ship at the full moon; or wurship, depending on how you pronounce your "u"s
Then again, we also pronounce where in multiple ways, depending on exactly what town and county you're from. It can be said as war, whar, whir, or way-ur
14 0 ReplyI pronounce them the same. Grew up on the west coast.
9 1 ReplyI pronounce them the same. Grew up on the east coast.
6 1 ReplyI pronounce them differently, and I grew up on the West coast, too. California, in my case. Did you grow up in Warshington?
4 0 ReplyI grew up in WA and I say it how OP does. I wonder there this person is from, too.
1 1 Reply
Anything to do with ‘r’s is a bit contentious. Like America still uses ‘r’s how they’re written.
Now the British are like “Goodness me, you still pronounce the ‘r’ in cah and fah? How uncouth, we’ve moved those pesky ‘r’s to other words ages ago”.
“Moved to where?”
“Any word ending in the lettah ‘a’ I suppose.”
2 1 Reply
For me, the wor in worship sounds like "were" (eg. they were naked), and the war in warship sounds like "wore" (eg. they wore clothes).
Maybe this is what OP means. Warship is pronounced wor-ship (And Worship is pronounced wer-ship)
6 0 ReplyExactly
1 0 Reply
Eye Warship Satin 🤘😈
6 1 ReplyWorcestershire sauce, anyone?
2 0 ReplyYes please!
1 0 Reply
Whoreship
2 0 ReplyWarship is just the Dollar Store version of the game Battleship.
1 0 ReplyAnd warr ship is a geordie claiming ownership of the boat.
1 1 ReplyWell he is chief engineer, and knows the warp core inside and out.
1 0 Reply*worp core
1 0 Reply