Cuisine refers to a particular style of cooking associated with a region, culture, or establishment. It denotes the distinctive methods, ingredients, and dishes characteristic of that culinary tradition. The term can also describe the food prepared in a restaurant or by a chef, reflecting culinary identity and craft.
- You may flatten the second syllable into /ˈkwɪzɪn/ by shortening the /iː/ and softening the final /n/. To fix: emphasize the long /iː/ and keep the final nasal crisp. - Misplacing the primary stress on the first syllable (/ˈkwɪziːn/). Correct by maintaining stress on the second syllable: /kwɪˈziːn/. - Dropping the w glide in /kw/ or making it too strong, which muddies the onset. Practice with a light /w/ transition from /k/ to /w/. - Over-articulating the /z/ which makes it sound like /zɪ/ rather than /ziː/. Keep /z/ brief and followed by a strong front vowel. - Final /n/ may become an alveolar tap or a nasalized vowel; keep a crisp nasal /n/ with clear contact at the alveolar ridge.
- US: You’ll hear a crisp /ˈz/ and a slightly tenser /iː/. Practice with a fast but clear /kw/ onset and a steady /ziː/ nucleus. IPA guide: /kwɪˈziːn/. - UK: Similar vowel quality, but may feature a shorter /ɪ/ and a more clipped /n/ due to non-rhotic tendencies in connected speech. IPA guide: /kwɪˈziːn/. - AU: Slightly flatter intonation; ensure the /iː/ maintains length. IPA guide: /kwɪˈziːn/. All: keep rhoticity minimal; /r/ is not involved. Focus on precise tongue tip contact for /z/ and a decisive /n/ touch at the end.
"The restaurant specializes in French cuisine and offers a refined tasting menu."
"Her grandmother’s Italian cuisine filled the kitchen with aromas of garlic and tomatoes."
"Fusion cuisine blends techniques from multiple culinary traditions."
"Students study global cuisines to understand cultural influences on food.”"
Cuisine comes from the Old French word cusine, which itself derives from the Latin coquina meaning kitchen or cooking. The path traces further to the late Latin coquina, from coquus meaning cook. In medieval Europe, cusine referred to the kitchen’s craft or the art of preparing meals, then broadened to denote a region’s cooking style. By the 18th century, cuisine entered English as a term for a nation’s or locality’s culinary tradition, often used in culinary discourse to categorize dishes and techniques (for example, French cuisine, Chinese cuisine). The evolution mirrors broader foodie culture: from practical kitchen work to a scholarly and gastronomic term describing cultural artistry, technique, and identity in food preparation. First known use in English appears in culinary writing from the 16th–18th centuries, with expansions in 19th–20th centuries as Western dining adopted global cuisines and the word acquired its modern sense of regional flavor and craft.
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Words that rhyme with "Cuisine"
-ine sounds
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Cuisine is pronounced /kwɪˈziːn/. Start with a light /k/ followed by the /w/ glide, then the short /ɪ/ in the first syllable. The second syllable carries primary stress and features a long /iː/ followed by /n/. Think: ‘KWI- zheen’ with the emphasis on the second syllable. Mouth positions: lips rounded slightly for /w/, tongue relaxed for /ɪ/, high-front for /iː/. For reference, you’ll hear variations in online dictionaries and tutorials, but the standard is /kwɪˈziːn/.”,
Common mistakes: (1) pronouncing it as two syllables with a weak second vowel, like /kwɪˈzɪn/; (2) misplacing the stress as /ˈkwɪ-ziːn/ instead of /kwɪˈziːn/. Correction: keep primary stress on the second syllable and lengthen the /iː/ in /ziːn/. Practice the /z/ clearly before the final /n/, avoiding vocalic reduction to /ɪ/ or /i/. Tip: anchor the /w/ in /kw/ and raise the second syllable vowel into a long /iː/ sound.”,
In US/UK/AU, /kwɪˈziːn/ remains relatively similar. The main differences lie in vowel quality: US tends to a slightly tighter /ɪ/ in the first syllable and a crisp /iː/; UK may exhibit a marginally shorter /iː/ and crisper enunciation of the final /n/. Australian often has a flatter intonation with perhaps a slightly softer /z/ and still the long /iː/. Across all, rhoticity is not a major factor for this word, but regional vowel shifts can alter the perceived vowel height and duration.”,
Cuisine is challenging due to the two-phoneme sequence /kw/ plus the stressed, long-vowel /iː/ in the second syllable. The /w/ glide after the hard /k/ requires precise lip rounding and tongue positioning, while the second syllable’s lengthened vowel and clear /z/ can be mispronounced as /ˈkwɪz.in/ or with a short /i/. Practice combining the /kw/ onset with a tense /iː/ to maintain syllable weight and accurate final /n/.
Can you maintain a crisp /z/ sound before the final /n/ without vocalizing the final nasal? In practice, the /z/ should be boundary-labeled as part of /ziːn/ rather than an elongated /z/ or a dropped /z/. Ensure the tongue tip lightly touches the alveolar ridge for /z/, then release into the nasal /n/ with a clean stop. This keeps the second syllable tight and prevents blending into a muted final sound.
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- Shadowing: listen to native speakers saying /kwɪˈziːn/ at natural speed and shadow 6–8 seconds after, matching intonation and rhythm. - Minimal pairs: (a) cuisine vs. cozy/ 'crean' without context; (b) cuisine vs. quasin? Not; Instead,32: practice with /kwɪˈziːn/ vs /kwiˈziːn/ to feel onset stress difference; (c) kitchen vs cuisine to notice vowel shift. - Rhythm practice: emphasize the strong second syllable; practice tapping syllables: 1-2-3 with 1: weak 2: strong 3: final nasal. - Stress practice: produce both slow and fast readings: slow: /kwɪˈziːn/; fast: /kwɪˈziːn/ with minimal vowel reduction. - Recording: use your phone, record yourself saying the word in sentences, compare to native phrases, adjust lip rounding and tongue height.
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