Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you say "niche"?
I always avoid saying that word allowed
neesh
*aloud
No way really??? I heard it pronounced “nitch” on TV the other day and assumed I’d been saying it wrong . Because I don’t actually know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you say "niche"?
I always avoid saying that word allowed
neesh
*aloud
No way really??? I heard it pronounced “nitch” on TV the other day and assumed I’d been saying it wrong . Because I don’t actually know.
Anonymous wrote:I still cringe thinking about my 8th grade regional debate performance when I repetitively said “epi-toe-mize” instead of “e-pit-tomize”. Water under the bridge - but thinking of it still makes me blush!
I still have a hard time with subsequent. I know how it’s pronounced but just can’t get it off the tongue - I always want to add an extra syllable. At this point in life though I can just laugh at myself and switch to a synonym.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still remember proudly and loudly mispronouncing omnipotent in high school English.
It's hard out here for an autodidact!
Aren't we all autodidacts? I certainly never remember school teaching us how to pronounce hard words (at least not after elementary school). We all have much greater written vocabularies than we do spoken vocabularies.
I listen to a lot of audiobooks and am shocked at how many pronunciation mistakes they make. I look up quite a few to make sure I'm saying things correctly and that they're wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you say "niche"?
I always avoid saying that word allowed
neesh
*aloud
No way really??? I heard it pronounced “nitch” on TV the other day and assumed I’d been saying it wrong . Because I don’t actually know.
It's neesh. Nitch isn't wrong exactly, because we all understand it, but it's not the standard, accepted pronunciation. Yet.
Anonymous wrote:I struggle with “niche” and “colander”. I can never remember. But yeah OP people were just too polite to correct you. It’s fine. My least favorite is people who say “fustrating” instead of frustrating. Happens more than you’d think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you say "niche"?
I always avoid saying that word allowed
neesh
*aloud
No way really??? I heard it pronounced “nitch” on TV the other day and assumed I’d been saying it wrong . Because I don’t actually know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you say "niche"?
I always avoid saying that word allowed
neesh
*aloud
No way really??? I heard it pronounced “nitch” on TV the other day and assumed I’d been saying it wrong . Because I don’t actually know.
Anonymous wrote:I recently said "Chia-puss" instead of pronouncing it right and a partner at my law firm turned and said "I've always pronounced it Chiapas," kind of with a "but what do I know?" attitude. It was SUCH a nice way for him to correct me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you say "niche"?
I always avoid saying that word allowed
neesh
*aloud
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will never, ever forgive my mother for laughing at me (aged maybe 10-12) when I said epitome as epi-tome instead of eh-PIT-toe-mee. She tried to backpedal, saying it was an indication that I was a reader, and that's a good thing... but she laughed at me.
This is not normal. I hope it’s a joke.
Anonymous wrote:I will never, ever forgive my mother for laughing at me (aged maybe 10-12) when I said epitome as epi-tome instead of eh-PIT-toe-mee. She tried to backpedal, saying it was an indication that I was a reader, and that's a good thing... but she laughed at me.
Anonymous wrote:I will never, ever forgive my mother for laughing at me (aged maybe 10-12) when I said epitome as epi-tome instead of eh-PIT-toe-mee. She tried to backpedal, saying it was an indication that I was a reader, and that's a good thing... but she laughed at me.