Here’s how I finally got “opaque” right and why it bugged me so much until I did.

The Awkward Realization
So I was chatting with this designer friend about some fancy packaging, and I said “oh-PAKE” like I always did. She kinda paused, smiled politely, and gently said, “You mean oh-PAYK?” Felt stupid right then. I’ve probably been mispronouncing this word for YEARS without knowing.
Why It Stuck With Me
Later that day, I kept thinking about it. That moment at the coffee shop? Total insecurity trigger. Made me wonder:
- How many people noticed but never corrected me?
- Did they think I wasn’t professional?
- Why does this word even trip people up?
My Correction Mission
Grabbed my phone and went straight to Google. Typed “opaque pronunciation” and listened. Yep. OH-PAYK. Clearly. No “oh-PAKE” nonsense. Practiced right there in my kitchen:
- Broke it down slow: “OH” (like dough) + “PAYK” (like cake, but sharper)
- Repeated it 20 times while making lunch
- Tried it in sentences: “The paint’s TOO oh-PAYK”
- Recorded myself to compare with Google
Sounded rough at first – kept wanting to say “PAKE”. Felt unnatural. But after 2 days of muttering it walking the dog? Started sticking.
Why Bother Fixing It?
Real talk: no one dies over mispronunciations. But in design meetings or talking specs with clients? Small things shift perception. When you nail terms like “opaque”, “niche”, or “meme” correctly:

- People focus on your IDEAS, not your mouth
- You sound like you KNOW your stuff
- Avoids that tiny credibility dent
Plus – it’s satisfying AF to stop stressing about getting caught out.
Still Mess Up Sometimes?
Absolutely. Old habits creep back when I’m tired. But now I catch myself. That little correction sting? Worth it not to sound like I’m guessing. And that designer friend? She laughed when I deliberately used it right last week. Point made.