Tore is an adjective describing something that is torn or ripped, often used to indicate damage or separation. In spoken English, it’s commonly heard in contexts like clothing or material condition, where edges are frayed or gaps exist. The term can imply recent or completed action, depending on surrounding words and tense. It shares roots with the verb form, reflecting the state resulting from tearing.

- Common Mistake 1: Confusing the vowel with /oʊ/ as in ‘to’; correction: keep the mid-back rounded vowel /ɔ/ by slightly dropping the jaw and rounding the lips, then lightly urge the tip of the tongue toward the alveolar ridge without tensing. - Common Mistake 2: Omitting or weakening the final /ɹ/ in rhotic accents; correction: practice with minimal pair contrasts that include a strong /ɹ/ and a silent /ɹ/ to train the muscle memory. - Common Mistake 3: Lengthening the vowel into a long /ɔː/ or misplacing the tongue high; correction: use a relaxed, mid-back position and a short, controlled vowel duration to avoid a drawn-out vowel. - Practice tip: use shadowing with native audio; record yourself; compare to reference.
- US: emphasize rhotic /ɹ/ strongly; toward the end, keep tongue curling and lip rounding consistent. - UK: often less rhotic; vowel may be shorter and less rounded; avoid adding extra vowel before /ɹ/; keep it crisp. - AU: more centralized vowel height with slightly retracted tongue; final /ɹ/ is present in careful speech but softer in casual speech; use IPA /tɔː(ɹ)/ to transcribe. - Reference IPA: /tɔː(ɹ)/ for all regions; adjust rhythm and vowel height as described.
"The tore fabric was left with jagged edges."
"After the storm, the tore sails flapped uselessly in the wind."
"That tore corner of the map is unreadable."
"She stood by the tore page, trying to remember the missing details."
Tore as an adjective comes from the past participle of the verb tear, which itself derives from the Old English tearan, tearan is; tearan has cognates in many Germanic languages (German zerreißen, Dutch scheuren). The adjective use emerged as speakers described the state left by tearing, distinct from the verb action. In Middle English, tore appeared in written forms to denote something that had been ripped, later aligning with modern usage: ‘torn’ is the past participle used in perfect constructions, while ‘tore’ as an adjective is more about the resultant condition. First known uses appear in late Old to early Middle English texts, where physical condition descriptors were common in trade, shipping, and clothing descriptions. Over centuries, the term stabilized in modern English as a standard descriptor for damaged fabric, paper, or other materials, maintaining a clear opposite to ‘intact’ or ‘undamaged.’ The word’s identity is reinforced by its relationship with tear-related verbs across English, and it continues to be adopted into idiomatic expressions such as “tore apart” to emphasize extensive damage while retaining its core sense of separation and disruption.
💡 Etymology tip: Understanding word origins can help you remember pronunciation patterns and recognize related words in the same language family.
Help others use "Tore" correctly by contributing grammar tips, common mistakes, and context guidance.
💡 These words have similar meanings to "Tore" and can often be used interchangeably.
🔄 These words have opposite meanings to "Tore" and show contrast in usage.
📚 Vocabulary tip: Learning synonyms and antonyms helps you understand nuanced differences in meaning and improves your word choice in speaking and writing.
Words that rhyme with "Tore"
-ore sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
🎵 Rhyme tip: Practicing with rhyming words helps you master similar sound patterns and improves your overall pronunciation accuracy.
US/UK/AU IPA is /tɔːr/ with the final r often pronounced in rhotic accents. For non-rhotic speakers, the /r/ may be lightly realized or dropped; in rhotic varieties you maintain the /r/ after the vowel. The vowel is a mid-open back rounded vowel similar to /ɔ/ in many dialects; position your tongue low-mid and back, lips rounded. Try saying 'tore', keeping the jaw relaxed and the lips rounded, then add a light postvocalic /ɹ/ in rhotic regions. Reference audio from Pronounce or Forvo if you want an authoritative native pronunciation.
Mistakes include lengthening or shortening the vowel in ways that turn it into a diphthong like /oʊ/ (as in ‘toe’) and omitting the final rhotic /ɹ/ in rhotic accents. Another error is pronouncing it with a pure /ɔ/ as in ‘saw’, or flattening to /ɒ/ typical of British non-rhotic speech. Focus on keeping a steady mid-back vowel /ɔ/ and fully articulating the rhotic /ɹ/; contrast with ‘tor’ and ‘tore’ vowel shapes using minimal pairs and listening practice.
In US rhotic accents, you’ll hear /tɔːɹ/ with a pronounced /ɹ/, making it sound like ‘tor-rrrr’ at the end. UK non-rhotic speakers may produce a shorter vowel and a weaker or vowel-like /ə/ or none at all after the vowel; some may drop the /ɹ/ or replace with a schwa. Australian English tends to raise and lengthen the vowel slightly with a clear but softer rhotic /ɹ/ in careful speech. Listening to native speakers in YouGlish helps identify these subtle differences.
The difficulty centers on mastering the mid-back vowel quality and the rhotic consonant /ɹ/, especially for non-rhotic or non-native speakers. The vowel is not the common /oʊ/ or /ɔ/ found in many learners’ first languages, requiring you to adjust tongue height and lip rounding simultaneously. For some speakers, adding or omitting the /ɹ/ at the end changes meaning in context; practice with minimal pairs contrasting /tɔɹ/ with /tɔː/ or /tɔːn/ can anchor correct placement.
A key nuance is listening for whether the /ɹ/ is fully realized or postvocalic; in careful speech you’ll clearly hear a rhotic ending, while in casual speech it may be subdued or elided. Another is distinguishing /tɔː/ from /tɔːr/ depending on regional variation; in some accents the final /ɹ/ is subtle. Practicing with context sentences and a native speaker audio reference will help you identify the exact ending you should reproduce.
🗣️ Voice search tip: These questions are optimized for voice search. Try asking your voice assistant any of these questions about "Tore"!
- Shadowing: listen to 3 native samples and imitate at natural speed, then slowed down version; - Minimal pairs: tore vs tore-n vs torn vs tar; pair them to hear vowel and final rhotic differences; - Rhythm practice: keep the stressed syllable on the first sound; - Stress: as an adjective, you may emphasize the first syllable; - Recording: record and compare with a native reference; - Context practice: use sentences with explicit state of material damage.
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