"The towering cannon fired a blast that silenced the crowd."
"Medieval fortresses were protected by heavy cannons and bastions."
"The festival was named for the grand cannon at the parade’s start."
"In the novel, the author follows the civilian code as the cannon of society evolved."
Cannon comes from the Old French cançon or canson, ultimately from Latin canna meaning a reed or cane, used metaphorically for a large tube or gun barrel. The English adoption of cannon as a firearm term emerged in the 14th–15th centuries, with early cannon described as devices using gunpowder to project projectiles. The word evolved from naval and siege artillery terminology, with early spellings and uses reflecting the blend of imported French and Italian military lexicon. By the 16th century, cannon had become standardized as the term for the artillery piece rather than any general explosive device. In modern usage, cannon also extends to metaphorical rules or canon in literature, law, or organizational bylaws, reflecting a broader sense of accepted authority or standard practice. The evolution mirrors shifts in military technology, from stone-throwing devices to metal barrel artillery, and then to symbolic systems that govern discipline or authority in social contexts.
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💡 These words have similar meanings to "Cannon" and can often be used interchangeably.
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Words that rhyme with "Cannon"
-non sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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Cannon is pronounced with two syllables: CAN-nən. The primary stress is on the first syllable. IPA: US/UK/AU /ˈkænən/. Start with a low-back, open-front /æ/ as in cat, then reduce to a weak second syllable with a schwa /ən/. Mouth position: a quick, closed mouth for /k/ followed by the short /æ/ with a crisp stop, then a relaxed, unstressed /ən/ with a neutral vowel and soft /n/. Audio reference: listen to the word pronounced clearly in standard dictionaries or pronunciation videos.
Two common errors: (1) compressing or centering the second syllable as /næ/ or /ən/ without schwa, making it sound like CAN-nan rather than CAN-nən. (2) Misplacing the primary stress or making the first syllable too short, yielding CAN-nən with even stress. Correction: emphasize the first syllable with /æ/ length and a clean release on /k/ then relax into a quick, unstressed /ən/; keep the second syllable lighter, almost inaudible as a syllable, not a full vowel. Practice using minimal pairs and rhythm drills to preserve the /ˈkænən/ stress pattern.
Across accents, the word remains two syllables with primary stress on the first: /ˈkænən/. In some US dialects, the /æ/ in CAN may be realized slightly more open or tensed in certain regions. UK English tends to have a sharper /k/ release and crisper /n/ at the end; the second syllable remains a weak /ən/ or /ən/. Australian English maintains /ˈkænən/ with a similar vowel to US but often a more centralized or centralized vowel quality in /æ/. Overall, the rhoticity does not strongly affect this word; the main variation is vowel quality and the length of the first vowel slightly depending on speaker.” ,
Cannon challenges you with two adjacent sounds: a strong initial /k/ followed by the short, lax /æ/ vowel, then a quick, unstressed /ən/ in the second syllable. The difficulty lies in keeping the second syllable reduced while maintaining the clear first syllable consonant cluster. Also, non-native speakers often add a vowel or stress to the second syllable. To overcome, practice a light, almost silent /ən/ after the /kæn/ onset and keep the first vowel short and tense without sliding into a longer vowel.” ,
A unique aspect is balancing the vowel /æ/ with an immediate reduction to the second syllable’s schwa. The A in CAN is short and crisp, not a long vowel, and the second syllable is a weak, almost imperceptible /ən/. This distinction matters in fast speech or connected speech, where the second syllable can blur into silence. Practicing with deliberate tempo helps you hold the first vowel steady and reduce the second syllable correctly.” ,
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