How to pronounce displaced in American English

IPA /dɪsˈpleɪst/ Syllables 2 · dih·splayst Stress 2nd syllable
dih·SPLAYST
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Americans pronounce displaced as dih-SPLAYST (/dɪsˈpleɪst/). Stress falls on the second syllable — keep everything else short and quick.

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Sounds
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Clarity
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Stress
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Intonation
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Fluency
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Common mistakes

Stressing the wrong syllable.

Stress falls on the second syllable, not the others. Stretch SPLAYST — keep everything else short and quick.

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Why it sounds different

Why "displaced" sounds like dih·SPLAYST.

The "" at the end of "" is dropped before the consonant starting "" — the surrounding consonants flow directly together — common in flowing natural speech; in careful or formal speech, the sound is often kept. This is called the Silent T/D Across Words, the way sentences stop sounding like a list and start sounding like speech. It comes out as dih·SPLAYST.

In real conversation

Hear "displaced" in the wild.

Click any sentence to see the full breakdown — every link, every reduction, every flap-T.

"The humanitarian crisis has displaced millions of refugees."
dhuh hyoo·ma·nuh·TAIR·ee·uhn KRAHY·suhs huhz dih·SPLAYST MIHL·yuhnz uhv REH·fyoo·JEEZ
Watch out

Common pronunciation mistakes in American English.

The textbook way isn't wrong — it's just not how anyone actually says it.

01

Stressing the wrong syllable.

Stress falls on the second syllable, not the others. Stretch SPLAYST — keep everything else short and quick.

DIH·splaystdih·SPLAYST
Questions

Questions people ask about this.

How is "displaced" stressed in American English?
Stress falls on the second syllable — say "SPLAYST" with a longer, fuller vowel and keep every other syllable short and quick. The respell "dih-SPLAYST" marks the stressed syllable in capitals so the rhythm is easy to read at a glance.
Is the American pronunciation of "displaced" different from British English?
American English uses different vowel shapes, a relaxed retroflex R, and connected-speech tricks like flap-T and glottal-stop T that British Received Pronunciation generally avoids. The respell "dih-SPLAYST" reflects the casual American form; British dictionaries typically print a citation form with crisper consonants and different vowel choices.

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