Well, at least that line went without a dinosaur reference.
It’s a good.beginning!The response sounds like Frank Drebin in my head.

deleted by creator
As you should. Unless you pronounce the word helicopter as “helico’ter” too, as they share the same root word; pteron.
The reason why the p in “pterodactyl” is silent is because the consonant cluster /pt/ isn’t allowed as the initial part of a syllable
When words are borrowed into English but have consonant clusters like this, English simplifies the cluster (in this case, /pt/ becomes /t/)
However, if the consonant cluster is preceded by a vowel, it splits up and the first consonant becomes the coda (final part) of the preceding syllable
So while it might have been he-li-co-pter in Greek, it became he-li-cop-ter in English
This also explains the silent g in “phlegm” and why it’s pronounced in “phlegmatic”
deleted by creator
That’s perfectly fine, as long as others understand you the exact was you pronounce it doesn’t matter
I was just saying what tends to happen, not what always happens
TIL the g in phlegm is silent.
Darge tgo bge differgent?
Funny that pt isn’t allowed but ph is allowed. Or maybe we should start to say “hlematic” 😜
That’s because “ph” is a combination of two letters to make a single sound
Using the IPA, an alphabet designed for writing down sounds of words, where one sound tends to correspond to one letter, “phlegm” is /ˈflɛm/ and “phlegmatic” is /fleɡˈma.tɪk/
But pterosaurs weren’t dinosaurs 🤔
It was the silent p in pterodactyl that said everything, not her silence.
You’re stuck in your head again, over-analyzing sentence structure, aren’t you she expressed with a mere glance.
I’m not really even in this conversation. She added with a blink. No doubt about it.
Every know there is Pee in a pterodactyl. Every body pees








