Anonymous wrote:Ask Dana:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this thread is astonishing. i have never heard of anyone calling it 'brock-lee' except dh's very new jersey dad.
Where are you from?
Anonymous wrote:The second o is usually glossed over and pronunciation minimized in the transition from the emphasized first syllable ending in the hard c sound to the de emphasized last syllable, starting with the softer L sound. This is assuming that someone is speaking naturally.
I would have a hard time deciphering whether someone was pronouncing 3 syllables or 2 unless they overemphasize the o (3 syllables) or pronounce the hard c at the start of the second syllable (bra-klee- 2 syllables). Pronouncing the hard c at the end of the first syllable gives a bit of a “trip” into the last syllable that gives 3 syllable energy even if the o is “silent.”
Anonymous wrote:this thread is astonishing. i have never heard of anyone calling it 'brock-lee' except dh's very new jersey dad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question for 2-syllable people. What others words do you know of that have a silent "o" in the middle of a word?
Melancholy
Wednesday is similar.
And some people pronounce nucular as nuclear.
Wednesday is NOT similar. Nobody in the world pronounces Wednesday with 3 syllables.
I think you got your nucular and nuclear around the wrong way. The actual word is nuclear. Some Americans pronounce it as nucular. How did that happen?
Anonymous wrote:Brock-a-lee
DC born and raised