[Vocabulary] how to pronounce "mistress's"?

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azhu

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Is it read as /mɪstrɪsɪs/?
Or /mɪstrɪs/?
 
/mɪstrɪsɪz/, /mɪstrɪsəz/, /mɪstrəsɪz/or /mɪstrəsəz/
 
Thank you! There are so many!:-D
They are all quite similar.

As far as your original question is concerned, mistress's has three syllables, not two.
 
But I think you can also pronounce it with two syllables, the genitive being assimilated into the final /s/. Shakespeare did so for instance.
 
But I think you can also pronounce it with two syllables, the genitive being assimilated into the final /s/. Shakespeare did so for instance.
The final vowel may be short, but don't you think there is a very clear difference in pronunciation, in modern English, between my mistress's books and, if we were to say it, my mistress books.
 
Those are spellings. I am saying you can pronounce them alike.
 
Those are spellings. I am saying you can pronounce them alike.
My question was about pronunciation, not spelling.

Still, you answered it. It seems that your pronunciation of this word is different from mine. I would not claim that I would pronounce three clear syllables in mistress's, but my mistress's is very different from mistress
 
I agree that pronunciation is the most common; I am just saying the other is extant.
 
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