| I grew up with an Erin (in Miami) and she was always trying to correct people who called her AIR-in. Short e EH-rin. |
Universally? Not true. |
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Aaron and Erin are pronounced the same, but who knows, I grew up in Pittsburgh and we have been accused of talking kinda funny.
It's discussion. My Dad is Merle, which can be male or female. Neighbor growing up was Hilary, who was a guy, but the others I know are all female. Neither of them have had a problem - my Dad's close friends and relatives all call him Moe. Friend that my DD plays soccer with is Ryan, female. I know both Kelly's that were male and female, same with Dana's. Interestingly, the Ashton's that I know are all girls, but an also be used as a male names. |
| I’m a 40ish female Kelly in a male-dominated field. Probably 85% of emails from people who don’t know me address me as Mr. Lastname. |
And don’t call me Shirley. |
| People crap on putting pronouns on emails, but I know people who have been doing it for years on their written correspondence for this exact reason. For men, the stakes of being misgendered are higher than for women given our societal biases about women. |
"Sincerely, Mr. Morgan Freeman" No pronouns necessary. |
LOL yeah. Unless you are from Ireland or Long Island, they are the same. |
Who uses Mr. or Ms. to refer to themself?? |
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In college I was friends with a woman named Terry who was married to a Robin. Robin was interested in photography and enrolled in some classes under his wife's name because they would never know.
Unrelated: they had a big argument once. They agreed Terry would handle indoor chores and Robin outdoor chores. They lived in the country with a propane tank for furnace. Furnace was inside. Propane was outside. Nobody filled it before the first cod snap one year. |
No they are not the same |
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The Erin/Aaron distinction debate is making me laugh because there are so many names like this and the truth is the nuance in pronunciation is too subtle for a diverse society with lots of different accents and language backgrounds.
It's the same with the name Laura/Lauren/Laurie, the first syllable of which can be pronounced LOHR, LAHR, or even LAW (with the "r" attached to second syllable). FYI Lauren used to be a masculine name until Lauren Bacall adopted it as her stage name in the 50s and it was popularized as a feminine name. And Laurie used to be a nickname for Lawrence, a masculine name. |
Find audio clips where they aren’t. |
Ralph Lauren’s Lauren is Luh-rynn but a good chunk of people say Lore-Rynn. |
| There’s a male baseball player named Shelby |