A noun meaning a written or spoken account of something, typically including information, analysis, or findings. It can also refer to a formal statement to an audience or authority. In American English, it is commonly stressed on the second syllable when used as a noun (re-PORT), and on the first syllable when used as a verb (RE-port) in phrases like “to report.”
- US: pronounce the final /t/ with a light release; /ɹ/ is strong and rhotic. The second syllable /ɔː/ should be full and rounded, with the emphasis on PORT. - UK: often non-rhotic; you may hear a shorter first syllable and a lighter /t/; stress remains on the second syllable for the noun; /ɔː/ remains central. - AU: similar to US but with vowel quality that can be slightly closer to /ɒ/ in casual speech; keep rhoticity but allow a relaxed /ɹ/; maintain the two-syllable rhythm. Use IPA: US /ˈɹɪˌpɔrt/, UK /rɪˈpɔːt/, AU /ˈɹɪˌpɔːt/.
"The quarterly REPORT outlined the company’s earnings and projections."
"She filed a police REPORT after the incident."
"The news anchor will present the REPORT tonight."
"Please submit your annual REPORT to the committee by Friday."
Report comes from Old French report, derived from Latin reportare, meaning to carry back or bring back. The Latin root re- (back) plus portare (to carry) gave a sense of bringing information back to someone. In Middle English, ‘report’ referred to a bringing back of information or a statement of relief from a journey or expedition, and by the 16th century it had solidified into the modern meaning of a formal statement or account. The verb form emerged in English as a separate function, with usage expanding into journalism, business, and bureaucratic contexts through the 17th–19th centuries as institutional communication grew more formalized. Today, “report” covers a broad spectrum—from academic and scientific reports to journalistic reports and police reports—while retaining its core sense of conveying information with structure and accountability.
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💡 These words have similar meanings to "Report" and can often be used interchangeably.
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Words that rhyme with "Report"
-ort sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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US/UK/AU pronunciation centers on two syllables: the first consonant cluster is /ɹ/ + /ɪ/ or /ɪ/ plus a rhotacized vowel depending on dialect, followed by /ˈriːpɔːrt/ in some forms. The noun stress tends to fall on the second syllable: re-PORT (US: /ˈɹɪˌpɔːrt/ or /ˈɹɪˌpɔːrt/). The key is a clear split between RE- and PORT, with the second syllable carrying primary stress and a strong 'or-t' ending. Practice with IPA: US: /ˈɹɪˌpɔrt/, UK: /rɪˈpɔːt/, AU: /ˈɹɪˌpɔːt/. Audio cues: listen to professional announcements and mimic the two-beat rhythm, keeping /ɔː/ as a long back vowel.
Two common errors: (1) Flattening the second syllable so it sounds like /ˈriːpɔːt/ with equal emphasis; correct by boosting the second syllable stress and reducing the first to a quick onset. (2) Merging /p/ and /t/ into a single alveolar stop; practice with a brief pause or light release between /p/ and /ɔː/ to keep them distinct. Also ensure the /r/ is pronounced with a relaxed tongue root rather than a heavy back-of-mouth gesture in non-rhotic accents.
US tends to have rhotic /ɹ/ and a stronger /ɔː/ in the second syllable; stress can vary but often on the second syllable for nouns. UK tends to non-rhoticity in some dialects, with a clipped /ɒ/ or /ɔː/ and a lighter /t/ release; AU mirrors US rhoticity but with vowel qualities like /ə/ in rapid speech. Overall, focus on where the /r/ is pronounced (strong in US/AU, softer in some UK varieties) and vowel length differences in /ɔː/ versus /ɔr/ sequences.
Because it combines a stressed second syllable with a short vs long vowel contrast and a final /t/ that can be unreleased or aspirated, leading to blending with /rt/ in fast speech. The /ɹ/ onset and /ɔː/ nucleus require precise tongue tilting and jaw position to avoid sounding like /riːp/ or /ɹɪpɔːt/. Also regional variation can shift where the stress falls and how clearly the final consonant is released.
No silent letters in the standard pronunciation, but the stress pattern is crucial: as a noun, it often bears the second-syllable primary stress (re-PORT), while as a verb the first syllable is stressed (RE-port). This shift in stress is common in English but particularly important for 'report' to sound natural in context, and it impacts intelligibility in fast or formal speech.
🗣️ Voice search tip: These questions are optimized for voice search. Try asking your voice assistant any of these questions about "Report"!
- Shadowing: imitate a news anchor reading a report aloud, focusing on two-beat rhythm: RE-port. - Minimal pairs: /ri/ vs /ɹɒ/ in quick phrases; practice with “report” vs “reporter” to hear boundary. - Rhythm: practice slow (RE-port) → normal (re-PORT) → fast (rePORT) with a small pause after syllable 1. - Stress: track second-syllable prominence by tapping the desk on the second syllable. - Intonation: in declarative sentences, let the pitch fall on the final word; for questions, rise slightly at the verb’s onset. - Recording: use a smartphone, compare with native samples; evaluate final /t/ release. - Context sentences: “The REPORT shows the numbers,” “She will REPORT on the findings,” “You must REPORT your results promptly.”
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