Nobel Laureates refers to individuals who have won the Nobel Prize, typically for outstanding achievements in fields such as peace, literature, science, or economics. It designates the recipients collectively and is used as a proper noun in formal and media contexts.
- US: maintain a rhotic middle and strong final /s/; use clear lip rounding on /oʊ/ for Nobel, and a mid-back vowel for Laureates. - UK: reduce rhoticity; ensure non-rhotic /r/ in Laureates; keep the /ɔː/ quality in /lɔːriˈeɪts/. - AU: similar to UK with slightly broader vowels; ensure the final /eɪts/ has a crisp /t/ and /s/; slight vowel lift in /ɔː/. - IPA references: watch the exact IPA: US /ˈnoʊbəl ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/, UK /ˈnəʊbəl ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/, AU /ˈnəʊbəl ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/. - General guidance: anchor Nobel with a rounded lip position at /oʊ/, then move to Laureates with a front-focused /eɪ/ in the tail; keep stress on NO-bel and LAU-re-ates.”,
"The Nobel Laureates gathered to discuss breakthroughs in sustainable energy."
"Several Nobel Laureates offered insightful commentary on global health policy."
"The academy announced the list of Nobel Laureates for this year."
"Past Nobel Laureates have often become influential voices in policy and education.”"
Nobel derives from the surname of Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor and industrialist who established the Nobel Prizes in his will of 1895. Laureate originates from Latin laureatus, meaning crowned with laurel, from laurus (laurel tree), a symbol of victory in ancient Greece and Rome. The term Nobel Prize collectively conferred on laureates emerged in the early 20th century as the prizes gained international prestige. The plural form Nobel Laureates appears in English when referring to multiple awardees across disciplines. The combined phrase gained common usage in journalism and academic writing as a standard designation for the recipients, with “Nobel Laureates” often used interchangeably with “Nobel Prize winners.” First known uses appear in early prize announcements and biographical references as the prizes expanded beyond physics and chemistry into literature, peace, medicine, and economics, reinforcing the honorary status of the recipients.Over time, the term has become a fixed compound in English, with capitalization indicating its status as a proper noun and a collective identity for those awarded the prizes.
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💡 These words have similar meanings to "Nobel Laureates" and can often be used interchangeably.
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Words that rhyme with "Nobel Laureates"
-tes sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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US: /ˈnoʊbəl ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/; UK: /ˈnəʊbəl ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/; AU: /ˈnɔːbəl ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/. Emphasize the first syllables of each word (NO-bel, LA-ure-ates) with a light secondary stress on the second word’s final syllable. Mouth positions: start with a rounded /oʊ/ then a schwa-reduction in US/UK; the second word ends with /eɪts/ as in “waits.” Listen for the clear two-word boundary and avoid blending into a single word.
Mistakes include: (1) saying the first word as /ˈnoʊbəl/ with a tense /l/ that bleeds into Laureates; ensure a light /l/ and clear /b/ stop. (2) Slurring the boundary: merging Nobel and Laureates into /ˈnoʊbəl.lɔːriˈeɪts/; keep a brief pause or boundary. (3) Misplacing stress on Laureates, sometimes stressing the first syllable in the second word; correct by maintaining primary stress on LAU- in Laureates. Practice with minimal pairs and slow practice to lock in the two-stress pattern: NO-bel LAU-re-ates.
US: stronger rhotic vowel in Laureates’ second syllable; US /ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/ with rhoticity less audible in non-rhotic speakers. UK: non-rhotic tendencies may reduce post-vocalic r, sounding /ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/ with a subtler /r/. AU: often shifts toward similar to UK but with Australian vowel quality, slight vowel height changes in /ɔː/ and broader flapped r in some speakers. Overall, the key differences are rhoticity and vowel quality in Laureates, while Nobel tends to remain stable.
The difficulty lies in the two-word phrase with distinct stress patterns and the final -ates of Laureates, which can sound like -its in fast speech. The primary challenge is maintaining the contrast between the stressed syllables (NO-bel vs LAU-re-ates) while keeping the second word’s ending clear. Additionally, English rhythm may cause compression, so careful enunciation of the /ˌlɔːriˈeɪts/ ending helps avoid mispronunciations or blending.
A unique aspect is preserving the syllable boundary between Nobel and Laureates, ensuring the La-uer-ates portion retains three syllables with the /eɪts/ ending. Many non-native speakers flatten Laureates to “laureates” as /ˈlɔːriˌeɪts/ or misplace the stress within Laureates. Keep the two-word identity intact by articulating NO-bel clearly, then a crisp LAU-re-ates, with the -ates ending clearly audible.
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- Shadowing: listen to a short sentence containing Nobel Laureates (e.g., A panel of Nobel Laureates discussed climate policy) and repeat after the speaker, matching rhythm and intonation. - Minimal pairs: compare Nobel vs No-bel; Laureates vs Laura-ates; focus on the /lɔː/ vs /lɔr-/ touching rhotic sounds. - Rhythm: clap on stressed syllables NO-bel and LAU-re-ates; practice alternating emphasis on each word while maintaining boundary. - Stress practice: isolate syllables: NO-bel (two syllables) and LAU-re-ates (three syllables) with stress on NO and LAU. - Recording: use a phone or recorder; compare to a pronunciation exemplar and adjust. - Context sentences: create two sentences with each word to practice in natural context. - Progression: start slow, then normal, then fast, ensuring clarity and boundary between words.
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