Anonymous wrote:I always thought there was a saying “we’ll burn that bridge when we get to it”. As an adult I learned it was two separate sayings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a reader more than a talker, I grew up mispronouncing several common words based on their phonetic spelling. Misled (MYzled), Infrared (InFRAIRed), etc.
I proudly stood up to do a book report in 8th grade, and pronounced a quote with the word chaos as "chah- oss" and the teacher laughed and called me out.
I also had only ever read the word sonofabitch, and didn't really know it was 3 words ... So I got really angry at my cousin at a family reunion and yelled YOU SAH-NOFFFFA-BITCH! I had no clue it was son- of - a - bitch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve shared this one before. When my husband started a new job and purchased some very nice dress shirts, I wanted to be helpful and get them ready for him. I opened them, removed all the straight pins, threw out the cardboard under the collars and the little plastic tabs tucked into the collars. I washed and ironed them and had them all ready to wear. The first time my dh put one on, he asked where the collar stays were. I had no idea what a collar stay was. I felt so bad that I went back to Nordstrom and bought brass collar stays, which he still uses 20 years later.
Never realized that! I thought this is why they were starched!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am very well traveled, but just recently realized that Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas are geographically the same city. The Missouri River defines the state borders and just splits the city in half. I always thought these were two completely different cities nowhere near each other.![]()
are they the same city then - i thought they just bordered each other. surely they aren't administered by the same local government for instance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That realtor is not pronounced "real-uh-tor"
again, this is regional.
Jewelry and Realtor are pronounced differently depending on where you were raised.
Huh. I always just assumed that these were simply commonly mispronounced words, rather than words with multiple pronunciations that are considered correct. Like mixing up the vowels in “nuclear” by pronouncing it “nook-you-lar.”
NO, no, no -- "nook-you-lar" is just plain wrong! Not regional.
Nook - You - Lur IS regional! If you're from Texas, this is how you say it even though it is clearly spelled differently than it's being pronounced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That realtor is not pronounced "real-uh-tor"
again, this is regional.
Jewelry and Realtor are pronounced differently depending on where you were raised.
Huh. I always just assumed that these were simply commonly mispronounced words, rather than words with multiple pronunciations that are considered correct. Like mixing up the vowels in “nuclear” by pronouncing it “nook-you-lar.”
NO, no, no -- "nook-you-lar" is just plain wrong! Not regional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a reader more than a talker, I grew up mispronouncing several common words based on their phonetic spelling. Misled (MYzled), Infrared (InFRAIRed), etc.
YES! To this day, I still hear “inFRAIRed” in my head.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How to pump gas but in my defense I am from NJ
This comment reminded me of something I recently learned:
That there is a little arrow by your gas gauge on your dashboard that tells you what side of the car the gas tank is on. Who knew!
I didn’t know. I’ll check next time I’m in car!
I checked mine and don't have one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That realtor is not pronounced "real-uh-tor"
again, this is regional.
Jewelry and Realtor are pronounced differently depending on where you were raised.
Huh. I always just assumed that these were simply commonly mispronounced words, rather than words with multiple pronunciations that are considered correct. Like mixing up the vowels in “nuclear” by pronouncing it “nook-you-lar.”
Anonymous wrote:How to tell left from right. I am semi-ambidextrous. High school marching band.
I was 32 when my sister pointed out that it is "Sherbet" not "Sherbert".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That a "yamaka" and a yarmulke are the same thing. I just thought I had never seen "yamaka" written out.
Dh thought “epitome” was pronounced ep-ih-tohm, and didn’t realize it was the same word that we all pronounce as ee-pit-oh-me.