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Related: About this forumCur-sed vs Cursed?
"cursed" - does it have different meaning if it's pronounced ˈkər-səd vs ˈkərst ?
I woke up to rain and decent temperatures after a hellish summer and the phrase "cursed summer air" came to mind. In my head it was clearly cur-sed implying that the air itself is the curse, the morning breath of Sauron himself. In contrast the short pronunciation implies to me that the air is the victim of a curse.
Is this just me?
3catwoman3
(25,441 posts)A quick Google search turned up lots of links. Here are 2 explanations:
1. Cursed or Curs-ed?
I was wondering if this is something r/fantasy would get.
Harry Potter and the Curs-ed Child is now open in my city and my wife asked me why I kept pronouncing it curs-ed (two syllables). My immediate response was; thats how you say it.
But I knew that was wrong as soon as it came out of my mouth. It made me rethink it and (for me at least) I came up with:
One-syllable cursed is a verb, the past tense of to curse. Harry Potter cursed the child
Two-syllable curs-ed is an adjective. Harry Potter and the Curs-ed Child
2. Curs-ed is like annoying and irritating. That cursed kid keeps throwing wontons at me.
Cursed is to be afflicted by a curse. That kid has cursed my wontons.
HelpImSurrounded
(509 posts)verb vs adjective but it seems very much a matter of connotation as opposed to definition.
Joinfortmill
(16,406 posts)Gaugamela
(2,658 posts)gives the same meaning to both pronunciations, but Im inclined to agree with you.
The cursed child and the cur-sed child definitely carry different connotations.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cursed