Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Kerry rhymes with merry (men), while Carrie rhymes with marry (man). Its the difference between men and man.
I think this is an East Coast thing. I grew up on the West Coast and we don't differentiate between Kerry and Carrie. Both are pronounced like Kerry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
+1
Nobody would be able to tell the minor differences (if any) in normal conversation.
No. No. No. No. They rhyme because the final syllables are the same sound but are not the same sound in the first syllable. Do you pronounce merry and marry the same?
I grew up in New England and we had a joke that only we could properly pronounce Mary, merry and marry differently.
I'm from New England too, and my family pronounces these differently. People from other places I've lived (NYC suburbs, DC) do not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Kerry rhymes with merry (men), while Carrie rhymes with marry (man). Its the difference between men and man.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
+1
Nobody would be able to tell the minor differences (if any) in normal conversation.
No. No. No. No. They rhyme because the final syllables are the same sound but are not the same sound in the first syllable. Do you pronounce merry and marry the same?
I grew up in New England and we had a joke that only we could properly pronounce Mary, merry and marry differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
+1
Nobody would be able to tell the minor differences (if any) in normal conversation.
No. No. No. No. They rhyme because the final syllables are the same sound but are not the same sound in the first syllable. Do you pronounce merry and marry the same?
I grew up in New England and we had a joke that only we could properly pronounce Mary, merry and marry differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
+1
Nobody would be able to tell the minor differences (if any) in normal conversation.
No. No. No. No. They rhyme because the final syllables are the same sound but are not the same sound in the first syllable. Do you pronounce merry and marry the same?
I grew up in New England and we had a joke that only we could properly pronounce Mary, merry and marry differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like Kerry and have only ever heard it used for a girl. I would pronounce Kerry and Carrie differently, so I wouldn't think of substituting one for the other.
How do you say them differently? They are the same .
Nope. My HS class had a Carrie and a Kerry. One, obviously, is pronounced with an /a/ sound and the other with an /e/ sound.
Kerry rhymes with Berry.
Carrie rhymes with Larry.
Maybe I'm just out of touch, but to me, Kerry, Berry, Carrie and Larry all rhyme with each other.
+1
Nobody would be able to tell the minor differences (if any) in normal conversation.