Eschew is a verb meaning to deliberately avoid or abstain from something. It denotes intentional avoidance, often for ethical, practical, or stylistic reasons, rather than mere lack of use. While uncommon in everyday speech, it appears in formal or literary contexts and can carry a tone of deliberate restraint or principled choice.
"She chose to eschew processed foods and focused on whole, natural ingredients."
"The committee decided to eschew controversial methods in favor of more transparent procedures."
"He eschews social media, citing concerns about privacy and time management."
"In building design, the firm eschews flashy ornamentation in favor of functional simplicity."
Eschew comes from the Middle English escheuwen, later eschewen, from the Old French eschewer, derived from escheoir ‘to reject or shun’. The verb roots trace to Latin excutere ‘to cast out’ (ex- ‘out’ + primus root of caedere ‘to cut’ in some forms), but the modern sense of avoidance emerged in the late medieval period through sense-shifting in Anglo-French. The spelling standardization to eschew occurred in early modern English, aligning with similar forms like shun, avoid, and abstain. The word's evolution reflects a move from a broader sense of exclusion to a precise moral or practical avoidance, often reserved for formal or literary registers. First known use in English literature appears in the 16th century, illustrating its longstanding association with deliberate avoidance rather than incidental non-use. Over time, eschew has retained its formal connotation, occasionally appearing in legal, ethical, or rhetorical contexts where strong intentional avoidance is emphasized.
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Words that rhyme with "Eschew"
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Eschew is pronounced ih-SHYOO or ih-SHYOO. IPA US/UK/AU: /ɪˈtʃuː/ or /ɛsˈtʃuː/? In practice, speakers use the unstressed initial vowel and a stressed SHOO syllable: /ɪˈtʃuː/ or /ˈɛtʃuː/? To be precise: the common, natural pronunciation is /ɪˈtʃuː/ with the initial e as a light schwa in many accents: /ɪˈtʃuː/. Think “ih-CHOO.” Mouth: the first syllable is quick and light; the second syllable has a rounded lips for the /tʃuː/ sequence. Audio reference: check pronunciation tools to hear variations.
Common errors: 1) Slurring to a single syllable (‘esch-oo’) instead of two syllables; 2) Misplacing the /tʃ/ as a simple /ʃ/ by saying ‘ee-SHOO’ or ‘eh-SHOO.’ Correction: keep a brief, light /t/ sound before the /ʃ/ and maintain the stress on the second syllable: /ɪˈtʃuː/. 3) Over-rounding the vowel making it /iːtʃuː/—instead, keep a short, lax initial vowel and crisp /tʃ/ onset.
Across accents, the main variation is vowel quality and the onset of /tʃ/. US often uses a shorter initial vowel: /ɪˈtʃuː/. UK and AU may produce a slightly purer /ɪ/ or a shorter schwa before /tʃuː/, with less rounding. All share rhoticity differences not affecting this word since /r/ is not present; the second syllable remains /tʃuː/. The main difference lies in the realization of the first vowel and the release of the /t/—some speakers may sound closer to /əˈtʃuː/ in rapid speech.
It challenges: 1) two-syllable rhythm with the freestanding /tʃ/ cluster; 2) maintaining a light, unstressed first syllable with a crisp second syllable; 3) ensuring the /t/ is released rather than elided in fast speech. Practice focal points: keep the initial vowel compact and short, produce the /tʃ/ with the tongue blade contacting the alveolar ridge, and finish with a clear high rounded /uː/ vowel. A brief, controlled lip rounding helps the /uː/ sound stay long and accurate.
Unique question: Does the 'sch' in eschew influence its pronunciation? In eschew, the initial 'es' is pronounced as a light vowel leading into /tʃ/ onset: /ɪˈtʃuː/. The 'sc' combination here is not a consonant cluster to be pronounced as /sk/; rather, the word's onset is the /tʃ/ following a soft initial vowel. The overall sound emphasizes the /tʃ/ sequence, so focus on a crisp /t/ then /ʃ/ (represented in phonetic notation as /tʃ/).
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