Concern (noun) refers to a matter of interest or importance, often affecting someone emotionally or practically. It can denote anxiety about a situation or a topic that requires attention. In everyday use, it signals worry or care about outcomes, people, or events, and sometimes functions as a topic or issue that merits consideration.
"There is growing concern about the environmental impact of the project."
"Her concern for his wellbeing kept her awake at night."
"The company issued a statement to address customers’ concerns."
"We need to address this concern before it becomes a bigger problem."
Concern derives from the Old French concern (concern, care) from mes: literally ‘to touch, trouble, worry’ and the Latin con- ‘with, together’ plus cernere ‘to separate, distinguish, perceive,’ extended by a figurative sense of ‘involving, affecting.’ The Middle English adopted concerns from Old French, carrying a sense of caring for a person or thing, typically with responsibility or interest. Over centuries, the word broadened to mean both a state of worry and a matter deserving consideration. In modern usage, concern can indicate both emotional care and a topic of practical importance, often carrying a neutral or slightly negative connotation depending on context. First known uses appear in medieval English texts, with clear ties to Latin roots through French intermediaries, reflecting the cultural transfer of legal, religious, and social concerns across Europe. The evolution shows a shift from “to touch or affect” to “a matter that affects someone,” then to “a worry or interest.”
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💡 These words have similar meanings to "Concern" and can often be used interchangeably.
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Words that rhyme with "Concern"
-urn sounds
-arn sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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Pronounce as kən-SERN with stress on the second syllable. IPA US/UK/AU: /kənˈsɜrn/ (US) or /kənˈsɜːn/ (UK/AU). Start with a neutral schwa in the first syllable, then a rhotic 'er' sound in the stressed syllable, finishing with a clear 'n'. Keep the mouth relaxed in the first syllable and tighten slightly for the stressed vowel. Audio references like native speaker recordings help confirm rhythm and vowel quality.
Common mistakes include stressing the first syllable as CON-cern instead of con-SERN, mispronouncing the vowel in the stressed syllable as a short /ɪ/ or /e/. Another frequent error is dropping the r in non-rhotic accents (though UK typically allows post-vocalic r in careful speech). To correct: practice /kənˈsɜrn/ with a clear, relaxed first syllable and crisp /ɜː/ or /ɜːn/ in the second, using minimal pairs and recording for feedback.
In US English, /kənˈsɜrn/ with rhotic /r/ in the second syllable. UK English tends to have /kənˈsɜːn/ with a longer, lax /ɜː/ and a possibly non-fully-rhotic articulation in some variants. Australian English often mirrors UK rhotic tendencies but with a slightly more centralized vowel quality, as in /kənˈsɜːn/. The key differences are vowel length and rhoticity: US maintains a clearer /ɜr/; UK/AU may reduce the r and lengthen the vowel.
Two main challenges: the reduced first syllable /kən/ requires quick, relaxed schwa production, and the stressed /ˈsɜrn/ involves a mid-central to close-mid vowel with a rhotic ending. Many non-native speakers misjudge the vowel height and tongue position for /ɜr/, leading to a flatter or mis-timed stress pattern. Focusing on steady, neutral schwa for the first syllable and a crisp, rounded /ɜr/ in the second helps stabilize pronunciation.
Is there a silent element in 'Concern'? No. Every letter contributes to the pronunciation, but the /n/ at the end can be subtly nasalized if the following word begins with a consonant due to linking. The main point is the stress pattern: con-SERN, not CON-cern, and ensuring the second syllable carries the prominent vowel and final /n/ without trailing off. Focus on the peak vowel /ɜ/ and nasal resonance for natural rhythm.
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