Anonymous wrote:I’m new to the area, and I’ve noticed a couple distinct pronunciations of “Virginia”.
I’ve noticed well-educated foreign-born people, with whom I tend to identify with more, tend to use the four-syllable pronunciation, whereas native born Americans tend to use the lazier (IMO) three-syllable pronunciation. I’ve noticed the prevalence of use of the three-syllable pronunciation isn’t really bound by SES lines, with people who I’d otherwise associate with being upper-class still using the three-syllable pronunciation.
Which is correct? As native-born Americans, which do you use? If you use the three-syllable pronunciation, why? Does it concern you or make you feel self-conscious that better-educated people might perceive you as a rube? Why does America tolerate such colloquialisms in language?
Do you have
any awareness of how offensive this post is?
Someone being well-educated and foreign-born
does not mean that they are better-educated than a native-born, educated individual.
My aunt is an M.D., Ph.D., and her B.S. is from an Ivy League university. Shockingly, she is a native-born American, yet she still is very-highly educated! It's amazing!
Since you obviously believe you are intellectually superior to others, I am surprised that you don't understand the difference between an accent and a colloquialism.