Mary, Marry, and Merry

Do Mary, marry, and merry all sound different, do two sound the same, or are all three identical? Your answer places you on one of the most studied dialect maps in American English.

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Top matches
  1. Philadelphia94%
  2. Baltimore87%
  3. South Jersey81%

Most revealing word: bubbler

Mary, Marry, and Merry preview image for Dialect Quiz regional map results

The Three-Way Distinction

In the most conservative pattern, all three words have different vowels: Mary has a long a as in mare, marry has a short a as in mat, and merry has a short e as in met. This three-way distinction survives most strongly in the Northeast, especially Philadelphia, New York City, and parts of New England.

Where the Mergers Happen

Outside the Northeast, most Americans merge two or all three of these words. The full three-way merger where all three sound identical is standard across most of the West, Midwest, and South. The two-way pattern where marry and merry merge but Mary stays distinct appears in some transitional regions.

Why This Distinction Is Shrinking

The Mary-marry-merry distinction is one of several pre-rhotic vowel distinctions that are disappearing across American English. Younger speakers in formerly distinct regions increasingly merge the three words.

How the Quiz Uses This Signal

The quiz asks about Mary, marry, and merry as part of its pronunciation question set. A three-way distinction is a strong Northeast signal. A complete merger fits the broad national pattern. Combined with other pronunciation clues, this helps build a reliable regional result.