Reuters is a proper noun referring to the international news organization known for delivering financial and business reporting. In everyday use, it is pronounced as two syllables, with stress on the first: REE-turz. The term has become a brand name associated with fast, reliable news, and is widely recognized in media, finance, and journalism contexts.
- Common challenges: • Misplacing stress (saying re-U-ters or re-TERZ). Solution: anchor the first syllable with a steady /riː/ and shorten the second to /tər/ or /tə/ with a final /z/. • Over-emphasizing the second syllable, turning Reuters into three distinct sounds. Solution: practice reduced vowel in the second syllable and smooth transition from /riː/ to /tər/; keep the /z/ light. • Final consonant issue: ending with /s/ or a voiceless /z/ mismatch. Solution: ensure the final is a voiced /z/; practice with minimal pairs ‘tether’ vs ‘tetherz’ to feel the voice onset.
- US: rhotic, vocalic length in /riː/ and a clear /ɹ/ onset; second syllable often /ər/ or /ərz/ depending on speed. - UK/AU: slightly reduced second syllable, less rhoticity in fast speech, more schwa-like vowel in /tə/ or /təz/. - Tips: reference Cambridge/Oxford dictionaries for IPA; listen to YouTube pronunciations from Pronunciation Pro, Rachel’s English; use Forvo or YouGlish to hear multiple speakers. - IPA anchors: US /ˈriː.tɚz/, UK/AU /ˈriː.təz/.
"The Reuters report highlighted the market surge after the federal announcement."
"She quoted a Reuters article to support her analysis."
"During the briefing, Reuters confirmed the deal would close next quarter."
"Analysts cited Reuters data in their investment theses."
Reuters originated as the name of the British news agency Reuters Ltd., founded in the 1850s by Paul Julius Reuter and later merged into Reuters News Agency. The surname Reuter is of Germanic origin, deriving from a personal name composed of elements meaning ‘information’ or ‘rumor’ (from Proto-Germanic *rūtaną, related to ‘to clear up, reveal’) with occupational and geographic surnaming practices. The company adopted Reuters as its corporate name, which over time became synonymous with swift, accurate reporting transmitted across the globe. The brand name gained prominence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as telegraphic technology and later wire services connected markets and capitals, cementing Reuters as a standard reference for international business news. The pronunciation path solidified in English-language media as /ˈrɔɪ·tərz/ or /ˈriː·tərz/ depending on region and era, but today most English-speaking audiences pronounce it with the first syllable stressed and a short, clipped second syllable. First known usage in English as a brand name traces to Reuters’ expansion in news dissemination, aligning with widespread adoption across newspapers and financial desks worldwide.
💡 Etymology tip: Understanding word origins can help you remember pronunciation patterns and recognize related words in the same language family.
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Words that rhyme with "Reuters"
-ers 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.
Pronounce it with two syllables and primary stress on the first: /ˈriː.tərz/ (US) or /ˈriː.təz/ (UK/AU). Start with a long 'ee' sound as in 'reed,' then a quick, light 'ter' or 'tər' depending on accent, and end with a light 'z' sound. Practice by saying 'REE-terz' smoothly, with the second syllable shortened. Audio references: you can compare against major news videos or pronunciation resources.
Common errors include: 1) Pronouncing as 'ROO-terz' with a long OO instead of 'REE,' 2) Over-articulating the second syllable, making it 'ree-TERZ' with equal emphasis, 3) Ending with an overly strong 's' sound rather than the soft 'z' in '-erz.' Correction: keep the first syllable /riː/ steady, shorten the second to /tər/ or /tə/ and finish with a voiced alveolar fricative /z/ for natural English flow.
In US English, you’ll hear /ˈriː.tɚz/ with rhotacized /ɚ/ in the second syllable when spoken quickly. UK/AU often reduce the second syllable to /ˈriː.təz/ or /ˈriː.təz/ with less rhoticity, and a lighter /z/. The key difference is the second syllable vowel quality and rhotacization: US tends to a sharper /ɚ/ sound; UK/AU favor a schwa-like /ə/ or /əz/. Always keep the first syllable strong: /riː/.
The challenge lies in the subtle vowel in the second syllable and the final voiced fricative. For non-native speakers, the /riː/ can be confused with a shorter /ri/; the second syllable often collapses to a schwa, and the /z/ end can sound like /s/. Focus on a clear long /iː/ in the first syllable, a quick /tər/ or /tə/ in the second, and a voiced /z/ to finish. Listening to native audio helps calibrate timing and voice onset.
A unique angle: some speakers reduce the second syllable to /-ərz/ in fast speech, effectively merging /t/ and /ər/. Practice by saying 'REE-terz' in a clipped, almost monosyllabic second half, then slowly insert the /t/ for clarity. This helps with rapid news reads where timing is tight, yet you preserve the brand’s two-syllable identity.
🗣️ Voice search tip: These questions are optimized for voice search. Try asking your voice assistant any of these questions about "Reuters"!
- Shadowing: listen to a 10–15 second Reuters clip; imitate exactly: tempo, intonation, and pause placement; gradually increase speed while maintaining accuracy. - Minimal pairs: compare Reuters with other two-syllable brand names ending in -erz vs -ers to feel the voiced vs voiceless ending. Pairs: Reuters /riːˈtɚz/ vs Reuters /riːˈtəz/; vs ‘routters’ as a cue. - Rhythm: practice iambic or trochaic patterns: pronounced REE-terz with strong first syllable; aim for even syllable timing. - Stress: maintain primary stress on the first syllable (/ˈriː/). - Recording: record yourself reading Reuters in different contexts; compare to native clips and adjust. - Context sentences: “Reuters reports that the market opened higher,” “According to Reuters, the deal is closer to completion,” “Reuters’ data indicates a surge in volatility.” - Speed progression: start slow, move to natural news-bullet cadence, then fast read.
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