Rescue (noun) refers to the act of saving someone from danger or a difficult situation, or the person or thing used to effect that saving. It can also denote a resource or measure that savely relieves someone from harm. The term implies timely intervention and aid, often in emergencies, with connotations of relief and protection.
- You: You may drop the /s/ in /s/ before /k/ and say /ˈre.kjuː/; ensure /s/ is clearly released between /e/ and /k/. - Ensure you do not merge /s/ and /k/ into /sk/ too quickly; practice a crisp separation: /s/ then /k/. - Don’t turn the second syllable into /juː/ with an extra vowel; keep it /kjʊ/ or /kjʊː/ depending on accent. - Vowel height: keep /ɛ/ like in bed, not /iː/ or /eɪ/; practice with minimal pairs: rescue vs red-queue? ok not relevant.
- US: Rhotic /r/; keep /r/ initial and ensure a distinct /kjuː/ to avoid /ruː/ drift. - UK: Often non-rhotic; the /r/ is weaker in some contexts; ensure the final /ʊ/ or /juː/ is clear. - AU: Similar to US but with slightly flatter vowels; keep /ɛ/ stable and a crisp /k/ before /j/. - IPA references: US /ˈrɛs.kjuː/, UK /ˈrez.kjuː/, AU /ˈrɛs.kjuː/.
"The firefighters performed a daring rescue from the burning building."
"The rescue operation succeeded after several hours of coordination."
"She trained as a paramedic to improve rapid rescue responses."
"A rescue dog found the trapped hikers and guided them to safety."
Rescue comes from the Old French rescurer, formed from re- (again, back) + curer (to care for, to heal). The sense evolved in Middle English as a ‘drawing back’ or ‘saving’ from danger. The root curer relates to care, cure, and cure means to take care of someone’s safety. Early usage in English around the 14th century framed rescue as freeing from peril. Over time, it broadened to include actions, people, or devices that provide relief and safety, such as rescue services, rescue dogs, or rescue operations in emergencies. The term remains linked to urgent aid and protective intervention, preserving the sense of purposeful action taken to avert harm and restore safety.
💡 Etymology tip: Understanding word origins can help you remember pronunciation patterns and recognize related words in the same language family.
Help others use "Rescue" correctly by contributing grammar tips, common mistakes, and context guidance.
💡 These words have similar meanings to "Rescue" and can often be used interchangeably.
🔄 These words have opposite meanings to "Rescue" and show contrast in usage.
📚 Vocabulary tip: Learning synonyms and antonyms helps you understand nuanced differences in meaning and improves your word choice in speaking and writing.
Words that rhyme with "Rescue"
-me) sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
🎵 Rhyme tip: Practicing with rhyming words helps you master similar sound patterns and improves your overall pronunciation accuracy.
You say REH-skyoo with the primary stress on the first syllable. IPA: US /ˈrɛs.kjuː/, UK /ˈrez.kjuː/, AU /ˈrɛs.kjuː/. The second syllable is /-kj(uː)/, producing a ‘kyoo’ sound. Avoid reducing to ‘rez-koo’ or 'ress-koo'. Think of starting with /r/ with a light trill of the tongue then glide into /kjuː/.
Common mistakes: 1) Weakening the first vowel so it sounds like /ˈrɪskjuː/ or /ˈrɛskjuː/ with improper vowel height. 2) Slurring /s/ and /k/ into /sk/ as /zskjuː/. 3) Misplacing the /j/ in /kj/ making /kju/ into /juː/. Correction: articulate /r/ then require a clear /ɛ/ or /e/ vowel in first syllable, then release into /s/ + /k/ cluster and finally /juː/. 4) Not stressing the first syllable, making it sound like /ˈrɛsˌkjuː/.
US: /ˈrɛs.kjuː/, rhotics are pronounced; the /r/ is strong and the second syllable is /kjuː/. UK: /ˈrez.kjuː/, often a shorter /e/ in the first syllable and non-rhotic tendency in careful speech, but many speakers still produce /r/ in linked speech. AU: /ˈrɛs.kjuː/, similar to US but with a more clipped vowel and a nontrilled /r/ in some contexts; the /juː/ remains. Across accents, the main variation is vowel height and rhoticity; the /kj/ onset remains consistent.
Key challenges: the /ɛ/ vowel in the first syllable can drift toward /eɪ/ or /æ/ in casual speech, and the /s/ and /k/ clusters must be cleanly released before the /juː/ glide. The /kj/ sequence requires precise tongue position: blade of tongue near alveolar ridge for /s/, then back of tongue toward velar /k/, then a rapid /j/ glide into /uː/. Start slowly, ensure a crisp /s/ before the /k/, and don’t turn it into a elongated /skjuː/.
Why is the stress pattern on 'Rescue' fixed on the first syllable in noun use while the verb form would shift stress? In standard English, rescue as a noun is stressed on the first syllable /ˈrɛs.kjuː/; when used as a verb (to rescue), stress shifts to the second syllable /rɪˈskjuːs/ in some related forms, but as a standalone verb pronunciation remains /rɪˈskjuːs/ or /rəˈskjuːs/ depending on dialect. In noun usage, you emphasize the initial syllable.
🗣️ Voice search tip: These questions are optimized for voice search. Try asking your voice assistant any of these questions about "Rescue"!
- Shadowing: listen to native speakers say /ˈrɛs.kjuː/ in contexts like ‘rescue operation’ and repeat in real-time with the speaker’s pace. - Minimal pairs: focus on vowel height with /ɛ/ vs /æ/ (rescue vs recuse? close though). Use pairs that emphasize the vowel difference. - Rhythm: stress-timed rhythm; practice breaking into syllables /ˈrɛs.kjuː/ then combine into quick sequence in a sentence. - Intonation: use rising intonation on questions involving rescue; falling on statements. - Stress practice: hold the /ˈrɛs/ for a beat; then glide into /kjuː/. - Recording: record your voice and compare to a native pronunciation, focusing on /s/ release and /kj/ sequence.
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