- You may mispronounce wind as /waɪnd/ (like 'wine') instead of /wɪnd/. Keep the short /ɪ/ vowel in wind. - In turbine, avoid saying /tɜːbaɪn/ as a single syllable; keep the secondary stress on -bine and pronounce /baɪn/ clearly as /baɪn/. - Don’t fuse wind and turbine into one sound; insert a slight boundary: /wɪnd tɜːrˈbaɪn/ (US) or /wɪnd təˈbaɪn/ (UK fast). - For non-native speakers, rhotic vs non-rhotic r can alter the /r/ in /tɜːrˈbaɪn/; practice both rhotic and non-rhotic pronunciations.
- US: articulate /r/ in /tɜːr/ and keep /ɪ/ in wind; the second syllable 'bine' carries primary stress. - UK: often non-rhotic; you may hear /təˈbaɪn/ with reduced first syllable; stress on 'bine' remains strong. - AU: similar to UK but with characteristic vowel shifts; ensure /ɜː/ quality; avoid over-lengthening the vowel in 'turbine'.
"The offshore wind turbine produced enough energy to power hundreds of homes."
"A faulty wind turbine turbine blade inspection delayed the project."
"Wind turbine technology is central to modern renewable energy strategies."
"Farmers leased land for a wind turbine installation to supplement income."
Wind comes from Old English wind, of Germanic origin, related to the Proto-Germanic windaz. Turbine derives from French turbine, from Latin turbo ‘whirl, spin’. The compound wind turbine emerged in English in the early 20th century as technology developed for converting wind energy into mechanical then electrical power. Early wind energy devices used improvised blades, while modern turbines employ aerodynamically shaped blades and variable-pitch control to maximize efficiency. The term turbine originally referred to rotating mechanical devices that transformed energy (water, steam, gas) into useful work; by the mid-1900s engineers applied it to wind-driven rotors. First known uses appear in industrial and academic publications around the 1920s–1930s, with widespread adoption after the 1970s energy crisis driving renewable tech investment. In recent decades, “wind turbine” has become a standard term in energy industry, policy, and everyday language as wind power expanded globally.
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Words that rhyme with "Wind Turbine"
-ing sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
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Pronounce as two words with primary stress on 'tur' in turbine: wind /wɪnd/ and turbine /tɜːrˈbaɪn/ (US/UK/AU share /tɜːrˈbaɪn/). IPA examples: US: /wɪnd tɜːrˈbaɪn/, UK: /wɪnd tɜːˈbaɪn/, AU: /wɪnd tɜːˈbaɪn/. Note the long /aɪ/ in -bine and the rhotic /r/ in US/CA accents; non-rhotic UK often uses /tɜːˈbaɪn/ without linking /r/.
Common errors: pronouncing 'wind' with a long /ɪ/ like 'wine' (/waɪnd/), and misplacing stress on 'wind'. Correct both: wind = /wɪnd/ with short /ɪ/, turbine = /tɜːrˈbaɪn/ (US /tɜːr/ rhotic; UK/AU /tɜː/ non-rhotic). Also watch for linking: use a light /d/ boundary, avoid blending into 'windtur'.
US tends to rhotic /r/ and clear /ɜːr/ in tur-; UK/AU often non-rhotic or reduced rhotics, producing /təˈbaɪn/ or /tɜˈbaɪn/ with a shorter /ɜː/. Vowel quality differs: US /ɜːr/ vs UK /ɜː/ or /ə/ in fast speech. Linking and intonation can vary; in US you may hear a stronger final /r/; in UK/AU, less or no rhoticity in casual speech.
Difficulties come from combining two content words with different vowel qualities: /ɪ/ in wind and /ɜːr/ or /ɜː/ in turbine, plus the /baɪn/ final rhyme. Stress pattern (two-words with secondary connection) can be confusing, and non-native speakers often misplace primary stress or merge sounds across word boundary. Practice separating syllables at natural boundaries, then blend.
In rapid speech, you might hear subtle vowel reduction in turbine to /təˈbaɪn/ (UK) or /tɜːrˈbaɪn/ (US) depending on rate; the key is maintaining the /baɪn/ rhyme and the 'tur' vowel quality. Silent letters: none; the challenge is accurate /ɜː/ vs /ə/ and the linking between wind and turbine.
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- Shadowing: listen to native speakers saying wind turbine (academic talks, news). Repeat in real time, matching breath and rhythm. - Minimal pairs: wind vs wined, turbine vs turbin (if you know mispronouncing 'turbine' as 'tur-bin'); compare /tɜːrˈbaɪn/ vs /təˈbaɪn/ to feel rhoticity. - Rhythm: practice 2-3 stresses in two words: WIND TUR-bine; then WIND-tur-BINE for contrast. - Stress: place primary stress on turbine's second syllable: wind tur-BINE. - Recording: record yourself and compare to a native sample; notice boundary between words and the length of syllables. - Context practice: read a sentence aloud with clear separation, then faster linking.
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