Logo

Whats the rule that makes "please" pronounced the same as "pleas"?

Last Updated: 29.06.2025 01:22

Whats the rule that makes "please" pronounced the same as "pleas"?

Back in the day (circa 1300), it was written <plesen>.

Words are pronounced the way that they're pronounced.

You'll usually find your answer there.

Gen Z is facing a job market bloodbath—but JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says employers are still chasing students who studied these fields - Fortune

There's no rule.

What's (not “whats”) the rule?

While you may reasonably ask why words are spelled the way they're spelled, it makes no sense to ask why they're pronounced the way they're pronounced.

England is launching a gonorrhea vaccine. Is Canada next? - Yahoo

If you're curious about why a word is spelled the way it's spelled, your first recourse should be etymonline dot com.

Please is an anglicization of the French word plaisir.

Whence the <ea> I cannot say but some other words that were spelled <ai> in French are spelled <ea> in English: aise → ease, graisse → grease, fait → feat.

Atheists, there is a god up there in heaven and he loves you so much that he sent his son to die the worst death imaginable and then to turn into a zombie all to save you from sin. Why do you reject him?

Pleas is spelled <pleas> because it's the plural of pleas.