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Dictionary.com

ออกเสียง lived = ‘LAHYVD’ or ‘LIVD

long-lived = ‘LAWNG-LAHYVD’ or ‘long-LIVD

 

Common Errors In English Usage Dictionary

In expressions like “long-lived

pronouncing the last part to rhyme with “dived” is more traditional,

but rhyming it with “sieved” is so common 

that it’s now widely acceptable.

 

Dictionary.com

Pronunciation Note For Lived

Lived, meaning “having a certain kind orextent oflife,

is not derived 

from the preterit and past participle of the verb live [liv],

but from the noun life [lahyf], 

to which the suffix -ed has been added.

Theoriginal pronunciation, therefore, and one still heard, is [lahyvd],

which retains the vowel (ī) of life.

Since the f of life changes to v with the addition of this suffix,

as when leaf becomes leaved,

this lived is identical in spelling 

with the preterit and past participle lived,

and conflation of the two has led to the increasingly frequent pronunciation of this lived as [livd]

in such combinations as long-lived and short-lived.

Both pronunciations are considered standard.

 

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Live & Reside

The word reside moved into the English lexicon in the 1400s, 

where it settled alongside older, more established terms like liveabide and dwell

The details of its provenance aren't certain

—it came to 15th century English from either the French of the day (the word resider) or directly from the Latin residēre. 

Liveabide, and dwell had been members of the English language since the language's earliest days

and if any of them (or the people who used them) 

had feelings about the interloper

those feelings have been lost over time

 

Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary,

pron: 

The adjective lived is not derived from the verb live (lɪv)

but from the noun life (laɪf) to which the suffix -ed has been added.

 

The original pronunciation, therefore, retains the vowel (ī) of life.

Since the f of life changes to v when -ed is added,

as when leaf becomes leaved,

this lived is identical in spelling to the past and past participle lived,

which is pronounced (lɪvd)


Conflation of the two words has led to the increasing use 

of the latter pronunciation for the adjective

in such combinations as long-lived and short-lived.

Both pronunciations (laɪvd, lɪvd) are now considered standard.

 

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language

long′-lived′ness n.

 

Word History:

Some uncertainty exists as to 

the correct pronunciation of long-lived.

 

Should one say (lông′līvd′) or (lông′lĭvd′)?

The answer depends in part on how one looks at the word.

Historically, the first pronunciation is the more accurate.

The word was formed in Middle English times 

as a compound of long and the noun life, plus the suffix -ed.

This suffix, though identical in form to the past tense suffix,

has a different function

to form adjectives from nouns,

as in the words hook-nosed, ruddy-faced, and round-shouldered.

(Note that English has no verbs 

such as "to hook-nose," and "to ruddy-face,"

that would have formed participial adjectives ending in -ed.)

 

In Middle English, the suffix -ed 

was always pronounced as a full syllable

so long-lifed (as it was then spelled) had three syllables.

The f in the middle, by a rule of earlier English phonology

was voiced between the two vowels to (v);

eventually, the spelling became long-lived 

to reflect the pronunciation

(We see the same alternation in life and lives; 

in Middle English, lives had two syllables just like -lived.)

 

However, this new spelling introduced an ambiguity;

it was no longer clear from the spelling 

that the word came from the noun life, 

but rather looked as though it came from the verb live.

In this way a second pronunciation, (lông′lĭvd′), was introduced.