To my linguist friends: Doug Hoylman asks, "Why does everyone pronounce this game [Chrononauts] as though it started with 'crow'? Every other English word starting with 'chron'—chronology, chronicle, chronometer, chronic—has a short o." I can't think of a good reason, yet I also pronounce it with a long o. Might it be due to the secondary emphasis on the last syllable? The word chronon is pronounced with a long o as well, but I'm not sure that has common enough usage to matter (and it leads to its own pronunciation question).
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m-w says chronogram and chronograph can both be pronounced that way, which fits with your secondary emphasis idea.
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I think that if you apply Pinker's theories to 'Chrononauts' you will find that because the prefix 'chrono' is relatively uncommon, our mental grammar reverts to a default when trying to pronounce an unfamiliar word. That default is usually a long vowel. If the game were called "Sononauts" I don't think anybody would ever use a long "o" sound for the mono- part.
It's a fascinating book. If you love language you should read it.
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doesn't help that i hang out with people who randomly pronounce words like other langauges/dialects. like calling it 'aluminium foil.'
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'naut' takes the second n, so if 'chron' took the first n, then the middle syllable would be 'o'. english tends not to do this. strip the n from 'chron', and then english tends to shift the vowel.
in chronology, the o takes the l, so it's not bare. similarly for chronometer. that's not a perfect description, but it's close.
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English is actually fairly inconsistent about syllabification and thus about how syllabification affects vowel sounds. One of the things I teach my students when they're learning to read polysyllabic words is to try "flipping" the syllable divisions in a word if their first try doesn't make sense. For instance:
pol-ish (first syllable closed by the l, so short o)
Po-lish (first syllable left open, so long o)
Hey, Doug, we're back to isonyms!