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I think more along the lines of what people hear everyday. If you're in an English speaking country day in day out, you will hear it phonetically. If not, much more possibility of interpreting a written word differently.


> If you're in an English speaking country day in day out, you will hear it phonetically.

Yes, that's how you get pronunciations that differ from the spelling.

If a word is rare enough, its pronunciation will be regularized to match its spelling. And for a foreign speaker, almost all words are that rare.




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