I'd ring that
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American here: I've never heard it pronouned any other way.
I figured it'd be america tbh. Not a single word there is pronounced correctly
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Conversely, just fucking go for it. Who even cares? Have a laugh about it!
I think mispronouncing weird words you've worked into your vocab is a nice middle ground between sounding insufferable and approachable. Yes I used ameliorate but I also mangled the hell out of it, so how smart could I really be?
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What about words that everybody pronounces wrong, such as “nougat”? No, it’s not “new-git”, it’s “new-gah”. I even heard “nugget” from somebody not long ago.
if everybody's pronouncing it "wrong" nobody's pronouncing it wrong.
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I figured it'd be america tbh. Not a single word there is pronounced correctly
wrote last edited by [email protected]Not a single word there is pronounced correctly
Not true. We have exactly one word that is pronounced that way.
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Not a single word there is pronounced correctly
Not true. We have exactly one word that is pronounced that way.
Huh. I guess correctly is pronounced correctly lol
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American here: I've never heard it pronouned any other way.
Do you also hear Caramel pronounced as Carmel? I hate that one...
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Do you also hear Caramel pronounced as Carmel? I hate that one...
wrote last edited by [email protected]That one depends on the person. Sometimes it's "care-mul" but others sometimes annunciate the word "carAmel" properly. Especially those in and around Carmel. Because it is not candy.
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a service that could explain how it's pronounced, AND WHY - etymology and local vernacular - would be amazing
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Huh. I guess correctly is pronounced correctly lol
I hate this weird mix between IPA and Latin letters. It's not how this works
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It’s called a dictionary, and they’ve been doing it for literally years at this point.
oh man, asking a kid in this era to look something up in the dictionary is quite the challenge.
In this book? why? why not just look it up online?
BECAUSE GODDAMNIT REASONS AND SHIT
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That one depends on the person. Sometimes it's "care-mul" but others sometimes annunciate the word "carAmel" properly. Especially those in and around Carmel. Because it is not candy.
carmel is a pretty little town... didn't they elect clint eastwood as mayor or something?
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There are two main groups, those who learned their foundational language mainly orally, and those who mainly learned by reading. Those who were readers would read Hermy-own or Hermy-onn because that would match how other similar spellings are pronounced. I was an ambitious reader very early on, so my pronounciations tend to follow spelling rules rather than actual practice
For what it's worth, her name is pronounced differently in different languages. Whereas it's "her-my-nee" in English, it's "Hermine" (long i + schwa-sound for the e at the end) in German and "Гермиона" (Germiona) in Russian
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When we were teenagers, my sister had obviously read the phrase "faux pas" and used it (correctly) in a sentence but pronouncing it "fox pass".
It was perfect. Like a Mike Myers "what the french call.... I don't know what".
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Insert me saying C-hash to a programmer friend and promptly being roasted for the rest of the evening.
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What about words that everybody pronounces wrong, such as “nougat”? No, it’s not “new-git”, it’s “new-gah”. I even heard “nugget” from somebody not long ago.
In French, sure. But unless you also talk about the national budzhay, you get that loan words can have different pronunciations.
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oh man, asking a kid in this era to look something up in the dictionary is quite the challenge.
In this book? why? why not just look it up online?
BECAUSE GODDAMNIT REASONS AND SHIT
The dictionary is now online and often includes an audio recording of the word or phrase of interest. Online is not always better than physical, but this is one of the cases where it is likely better. If you're suggesting a less convenient method of doing something, it makes sense to request a reason. In this case I have to agree with the kids.
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It’s called a dictionary, and they’ve been doing it for literally years at this point.
*literally hundreds of years
The American Phonetic Dic-tionary of the English Language, edited by Dan S. Smalley, Cincinnati, 1855, has a unique interest. The oldest English dictionary to be printed in a "phonetic" alphabet
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/epdf/10.1080/00335634209380758?needAccess=true
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My buddy says "chasm" with a soft ch. We've tried to correct him. He doesn't hear us. He also pronounces "tome" like "tomb".
We play DnD together if anyone was wondering why these words would come up with any regularity.
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Well...im my country there actually is
You can call them, they are very nice and for bonus points you can also ask them about any questions you have regarding grammar rules and how you would correctly use them in you specific context
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Better to corrected than let things get too awry.
Awry.
Awwww-reeeeeeeeeeee..........