Ignorant local pronounciations that stick...
Replies
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Jewelry as "jew-ler-y."0
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Yikes! It's one thing to completely mispronounce a word. But to be called ignorant for using your local accent/dialect is pretty harsh.
And I have to say that people spelling things wrong is way worse than people saying things wrong, especially with so many communications these days through email, text, internet forums, etc....
*Hope I didn't spell anything wrong here*
Yes! I get upset every time I'm arguing with someone online and the other person writes "your" when they mean "you're," I cannot continue to take their points seriously. A person who writes "there" instead of "their" just looks stupid. Many of the people who do this on Facebook went to the same school with me, so I don't understand how they don't know the differences.0 -
Jewelry as "jew-ler-y."0
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I'm curious... How do you pronounce it correctly? I need some phonetics here.
kike in doll
Thanks I was curious too. I would never have guessed "kike in doll".
My last chance to try to help a fellow "mispronouncer" LOL... :-) Re-posting my 2cents from page two of this feed... moving on to bigger and better things now!
Re-post as follows:
So I looked up the pronunciation and this is what my search returned...
kerr ken doll
Kuy - sounds like 'Ker' (rhymes with "her")
kendahl = ken doll, like Barbie's Boyfriend
So" kike in doll" may not be correct... :-) Heck what do I know, I never saw or heard the name/word until now! LOL!0 -
Jewelry as "jew-ler-y."0
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Jewelry as "jew-ler-y."
I *think* I do. But then I'm British. It also depends on how lazy I'm being.
I'm still struggling to think how I pronounce Aluminium - over enunciating it slowly is not helping. (All I know is I don't say a-loo-mi-num)0 -
I'm still struggling to think how I pronounce Aluminium - over enunciating it slowly is not helping. (All I know is I don't say a-loo-mi-num)0
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Many of the people who do this on Facebook went to the same school with me, so I don't understand how they don't know the differences.
I am constantly amazed at the difference in overall knowledge in the people who went to the same school I did. It blows my mind -- they had the same teachers and classes at the same time and some are quite competent and others, I don't know how they graduated.
Straying off-topic I know, but it amazes me how some professional people don't know how to spell their OWN fields of study. How can you be a psychologist (or even a freshman psychology MAJOR) and still spell it pyscology? Or the nurse practitioner who constantly refers to herself as "Tammy Reed, RN, nurse pracioner" on paperwork? Scary stuff.0 -
Incorrect past tenses get my goat too. "I won you" is a personal fave. Did you? Are you taking me home?
[
I can't figure out what "I won you" is supposed to mean. I'm seriously confused. I need some context. When would a person say that?0 -
I'm curious... How do you pronounce it correctly? I need some phonetics here.
kike in doll
I work with a woman who has that as a last name. She pronounces it KY-kendall.0 -
Jewelry as "jew-ler-y."
There isn't just US vs. British pronunciation with a lot of words. There are regions within both countries where people pronounce words differently from other regions within the same country.
I believe within the UK, to get specific, how one pronounces "pasta" depends on where one grew up. Some say p-ah-sta and some p-*kitten*-ta.0 -
Lol Winnipeg is full of French named streets that are butchered daily.
Lagimodier
Chevier
St Boniface
Notre Dame (Dame like "name" and I don't even know what people are doing with the Notre part)
Also gotta say.. my GPS is the worst offender haha. It pronounces Kenaston (Like Barbie and Ken) like Keeenaston. And Watt Street is "What?" Street.
I'll also add:
- Pellow (Pillow)
- Melk (Milk)
and anything like that is very very common here.0 -
Incorrect past tenses get my goat too. "I won you" is a personal fave. Did you? Are you taking me home?
[
I can't figure out what "I won you" is supposed to mean. I'm seriously confused. I need some context. When would a person say that?0 -
None of these are incorrect (except that Coke is trade-marked, I believe, yet used as a generic term to describe all similar cola products), but are regional differences:
pop
soda
soda pop
coke
*Insert additional names here.*0 -
This isn't a pronunciation, but I'm from the Philadlephia suburbs, and we eat HOAGIES here. Apparently everyone else in the entire country calls them "subs" or "grinders". Not sure why we had to be special.
Also, people in Pennysylvania pronounce water as "woodder" instead of "wahter". Drives me insane.
Not all of us say "wooder". Just people from Philly.
Also, we invented hoagies. We get to call them whatever we want.0 -
I have two.
My native Vermonter husband doesn't have ideas, he has "ideers"!!! And the car isn't parked inthe garage, it is in the "gararge"!!
Makes me nuts!
The thing that makes me most crazy is when people say "you disrespected me". Since when is disrespect a verb?!0 -
I grew up in Lancaster, PA.
It's pronounced lan-kiss-ter
Easiest way to figure out if someone is local or not.
Thank you, yes, was going to say this.
Also in Eastern PA we have a town called "New Tripoli". It's pronounced "New Tra-POLE-ee" not like the city in Libya.0 -
The thing that makes me most crazy is when people say "you disrespected me". Since when is disrespect a verb?!
Since always:
dis·re·spect [dis-ri-spekt] Show IPA
noun
1.
lack of respect; discourtesy; rudeness.
verb (used with object)
2.
to regard or treat without respect; regard or treat with contempt or rudeness.0 -
Here in Detroit we have a road called Livernois (French= Li-vern-wah) but you will not find a Detroiter that doesn't say "Li-ver-noise" but we do pronounce "Cadiuex" (Kad-joo) correctly.
And Detroit is actually "Day-Twah" but if you say that in public, you may get shot...
Ok, if you ARE in public you may get shot.0 -
Here in Detroit we have a road called Livernois (French= Li-vern-wah) but you will not find a Detroiter that doesn't say "Li-ver-noise" but we do pronounce "Cadiuex" (Kad-joo) correctly.
And Detroit is actually "Day-Twah" but if you say that in public, you may get shot...
Ok, if you ARE in public you may get shot.
Kinda funny, but true.0 -
There's a whole slew of Wisconsin cities that no one can pronounce. Look up the YouTube video of Texans pronouncing Wisconsin cities and you'll see what I mean.
There are two in Wisconsin that drive me up a wall. Inability to pronounce the "th" in that / there / those / etc. "Dat der truck." Those aren't words! The other one is inserting "r's" where the don't belong. Especially when "wash" becomes "worsh."
I've lived in wisconsin my whole life." Dat der truck" absolutely. But I've never heard "worsh" for "wash". We do not add r's to our words. I know a guy from st. Louis who does that though.
My pet peeve when i see interviews on tv is AX instead of ask.0 -
The thing that makes me most crazy is when people say "you disrespected me". Since when is disrespect a verb?!
Since always:
dis·re·spect [dis-ri-spekt] Show IPA
noun
1.
lack of respect; discourtesy; rudeness.
verb (used with object)
2.
to regard or treat without respect; regard or treat with contempt or rudeness.
Thank you, I guess. I didn't know that.0 -
There's a whole slew of Wisconsin cities that no one can pronounce. Look up the YouTube video of Texans pronouncing Wisconsin cities and you'll see what I mean.
There are two in Wisconsin that drive me up a wall. Inability to pronounce the "th" in that / there / those / etc. "Dat der truck." Those aren't words! The other one is inserting "r's" where the don't belong. Especially when "wash" becomes "worsh."
I've lived in wisconsin my whole life." Dat der truck" absolutely. But I've never heard "worsh" for "wash". We do not add r's to our words. I know a guy from st. Louis who does that though.
My pet peeve when i see interviews on tv is AX instead of ask.0 -
I grew up in Lancaster, PA.
It's pronounced lan-kiss-ter
Easiest way to figure out if someone is local or not.
We have one in Ohio, but we pronounce it LAIN-ca-ster... it's fun to listen to out-of-staters try to say it...0 -
There's a whole slew of Wisconsin cities that no one can pronounce. Look up the YouTube video of Texans pronouncing Wisconsin cities and you'll see what I mean.
There are two in Wisconsin that drive me up a wall. Inability to pronounce the "th" in that / there / those / etc. "Dat der truck." Those aren't words! The other one is inserting "r's" where the don't belong. Especially when "wash" becomes "worsh."
I've lived in wisconsin my whole life." Dat der truck" absolutely. But I've never heard "worsh" for "wash". We do not add r's to our words. I know a guy from st. Louis who does that though.
My pet peeve when i see interviews on tv is AX instead of ask.
My friend's mother was born and raised in Colorado and she is the only one I have ever heard say "worsh", and I have lived in Wisconsin my whole life.0 -
We don't have an accent. Ya'll do.
In college, we were discussing dialects, and our language arts prof gave us some trivia: a lot of southern euphemisms and manners of speech are Appalachian based (no surprise).
Before you start to paddle faster because you hear banjos, bear with me. The folks from Appalachia were cut off geographically from the big cities, like New York and Philadelphia and their realms of language influence and evolution. But they did keep the Queen's English, that is, the queens of England from the time of colonization to Victoria.
Older english literature can be shown to reflect language usage found in the Appalachian-influenced region. "Carry me to the store" (give me a ride to the store), "I'm fixing to do something" (I'm about to do something). "i reckon" (I think).0 -
The thing that makes me most crazy is when people say "you disrespected me". Since when is disrespect a verb?!
Since always:
dis·re·spect [dis-ri-spekt] Show IPA
noun
1.
lack of respect; discourtesy; rudeness.
verb (used with object)
2.
to regard or treat without respect; regard or treat with contempt or rudeness.
Thank you, I guess. I didn't know that.
Well, you don't have to be bothered by it anymore.0 -
Apparently in the mid-west they have problems with French pronunciations of French words. Particularly in the names of their cities and towns.
I'm looking at you Versailles, Indiana (Ver-sales)
Other tiny towns in Indiana...
Buena Vista pronounced Byunee Vistee
Vevay pronounced Veevee
Peru pronounced Pee Roo
Milan pronounced My Lan
Russiaville pronounced Rooshaville0 -
Bangor, Maine is pronounced "Ban-gore" not "Ban-ger." Just so you know.
Oh, my god, thank you. :flowerforyou: Also, "Lewiston" does NOT have an "r" in it ("Louerstin")0 -
If I can't spell it, I ain't sayin' it. I can't spell much.
Also, c'mon Boston, learn how to say 'car keys' and 'drawer'
I struggle with "drawer" every single time.
I also chuckle a bit whenever anyone not from here says Worcester.0
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