Pecan Pronunciation

PEE-can or puh-KAHN? How you pronounce this nut's name is a surprisingly reliable regional dialect marker in American English, with clear geographic divisions.

FreeNo signup15–20 questionsPersonal mapShareable result

Sample dialect map

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

Most revealing word: bubbler

Pecan Pronunciation preview image for Dialect Quiz regional map results

The PEE-can vs puh-KAHN Divide

PEE-can with stress on the first syllable and a long e is common in the North and Northeast. Puh-KAHN with stress on the second syllable and an ah vowel dominates the South. PEE-kahn with a short a blends both patterns and appears in transitional zones.

Regional Patterns

The PEE-can pronunciation covers most of the North, Northeast, and parts of the Midwest. Puh-KAHN is the Southern standard. PEE-kahn appears in the Midwest and West as a compromise form. Some speakers switch depending on context, using one pronunciation for the nut and another for pecan pie.

Why Food Words Carry Strong Dialect Signals

Food words are learned in the home and kitchen, making them resistant to standardization. Pecan, caramel, crawfish, and soda/pop/coke are among the most stable regional vocabulary markers because they are acquired in intimate family settings.

How the Quiz Scores Your Answer

The main dialect quiz includes a pecan pronunciation question. Each variant adds points to different regions, and the pattern across all 15 questions produces a more reliable result than any single food-word answer alone.