Regiment is a large organized military unit headed by a colonel, typically comprising several battalions. It can also refer more broadly to a systematic, rigorous program or set of rules. In common usage, it often denotes formal order, discipline, and structured administration within armed forces, or a strict routine in non-military contexts.
"The regiment marched in precise formation under the banner."
"She followed a strict exercise regiment to prepare for the race."
"The regiment's commander issued new rules to standardize drill practices."
"His daily skincare regiment includes cleansing, toning, and moisturizing."
Regiment comes from the Old French regiment (14th century), from Latin regimenta, plural of regimentum, meaning a rule, order, or governance. The root is reg- ‘to rule’ from Latin rex (king). In military usage, regiment referred to a body of soldiers organized under a rule or set of regulations; this sense evolved in medieval and early modern Europe as armies adopted standardized units. The form entered English via Norman influence during the medieval period. By the 17th century, regiment had taken on a precise military meaning as a unit commanded by a colonel, consisting of a number of battalions or companies. In broader modern usage, regiment also appears in medical and lifestyle contexts to describe a fixed, repetitive routine, borrowing the notion of ordered, rule-based practice from its military ancestor. First known English attestations appear in military treatises and chronicles that describe standardized formations and command structures, cementing the word’s association with discipline, organization, and systematic practice.
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Words that rhyme with "Regiment"
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Pronunciation is rɪˈdʒɪmənt in US/UK/AU. The main stress is on the second syllable: re-GI-ment. Start with a short ‘ri’ as in riddance, then the ‘j’ as in jam, followed by a reduced ‘ment’ ending. Think: ri-DJIM-ment with the ‘GI’ sounding like /dʒɪ/. In clear IPA: US/UK/AU: rɪˈdʒɪmənt. Audio reference: try the Cambridge or Oxford dictionaries’ audio; you’ll hear the light secondary stress on the first syllable and a crisp /dʒ/ onset in the second syllable.
Common errors: (1) stressing the first syllable: RE-gi-ment. Correction: place primary stress on the second syllable: re-GI-ment. (2) pronouncing with a hard ‘g’ as in ‘regain’: sound is /dʒ/ as in judge in the second syllable: ri-DJIM-ment. (3) adding a vowel after the final /t/ or inserting an extra syllable: say -ment with a light, unstressed ending. Practice by isolating the /dʒ/ sequence in the middle: ri + /dʒɪ/ + mənt.
Across US/UK/AU, the primary stress remains on the second syllable: re-GI-ment. US tends to be slightly flatter with less vowel reduction in quick speech; UK often preserves a more clipped, precise /ɪ/ and may maintain clearer syllable articulation; Australian tends to be a bit more vowel-reduced in rapid speech, with a relaxed /ə/ in the final syllable. The middle /dʒ/ sound remains a /dʒ/ in all, not a /ʒ/; ensure you voice the affricate fully. IPA references: US rɪˈdʒɪmənt, UK rɪˈdʒɪmənt, AU rɪˈdʒɪmənt.
The difficulty centers on the middle /dʒ/ consonant cluster and the unstressed final syllable /mənt/. You must fuse /dʒ/ with a quick schwa then a nasal stop. Americans may reduce vowels more aggressively, UK speakers may maintain crisper consonants, and Aussies may lower the final vowel slightly. Practice by isolating the mid-syllable /dʒɪ/ and quickly attaching /mənt/ without inserting extra vowels. IPA cues: /rɪˈdʒɪmənt/ with careful voicing on /dʒ/ and subtle /ə/ in the final syllable.
A unique feature is the stressed second syllable with the /dʒ/ onset that links to the preceding 're-' syllable. Unlike some words where stress shifts, regiment consistently keeps the main stress on -GI- after the prefix re-. This creates a recognizable rhythm: re-GI-ment. Maintain a tight jaw and a rounded lips position for the /dʒ/ to ensure a crisp affricate rather than a fricative.
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