Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was growing up, in NY, there were actually slightly different pronunciations for:
Carrie
Kerry
It's all the same to me.
I'm from NY, and those are completely different pronunciations. The PP who hears Aaron/ Erin the same with the "American" (you do realize there are different accents in different parts of America, right?) accent, Aaron is pronounced with a short A like arrow. Erin is pronounced with a short E like error.
Oh, but wait. Arrow and Error (Airrow and Airrer) have the same beginning.Native New Englander but not with the weird Boston accent part.
No New Englander I've known says airrer for error, lol. In the NE I know, arrow and error do not have the same beginning. One starts with "air," the other starts with "eh."
Someone above mentioned Barry vs. berry. Again, these are two different sounds in NE: one starts with "bair" (rhymes with air), the other starts with "beh"-- the same "e" sound in the name "Ed."
The same is true with Carrie/Kerry, Aaron/Erin, and Mary/merry.
As a PP noted above, with the STANDARD English pronunciation, it's as simple as knowing the difference between short a sound and short e sound. I don't know why everyone's bringing regional pronunciations into this. This is not a debate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Sur La Table & gene se qua
Sur la table = sir la TA-bleh
gene se qua? you mean Je ne sais quoi? = Zhoo (with the oo like in book) noo (same with the oo like in book) say kwah
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Xavier. I pronounce is like Ja-vi-eh but I hear lots of ex-av-e-or.
I'm from Massachusetts and there was an old joke I recall that only we New Englanders pronounce "Mary," "merry" and "marry" completely differently.
This is just different languages. HA-vee-eh is the Spanish pronounciation. XAY-vee-or is the English pronounciation.
This is no different than Jesus (HAY soos vs GEE-zus), Michael (MAYE-kool vs MEE-shell) and a host of other names common to multiple languages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was growing up, in NY, there were actually slightly different pronunciations for:
Carrie
Kerry
It's all the same to me.
I'm from NY, and those are completely different pronunciations. The PP who hears Aaron/ Erin the same with the "American" (you do realize there are different accents in different parts of America, right?) accent, Aaron is pronounced with a short A like arrow. Erin is pronounced with a short E like error.
Oh, but wait. Arrow and Error (Airrow and Airrer) have the same beginning.Native New Englander but not with the weird Boston accent part.
No New Englander I've known says airrer for error, lol. In the NE I know, arrow and error do not have the same beginning. One starts with "air," the other starts with "eh."
Someone above mentioned Barry vs. berry. Again, these are two different sounds in NE: one starts with "bair" (rhymes with air), the other starts with "beh"-- the same "e" sound in the name "Ed."
The same is true with Carrie/Kerry, Aaron/Erin, and Mary/merry.
As a PP noted above, with the STANDARD English pronunciation, it's as simple as knowing the difference between short a sound and short e sound. I don't know why everyone's bringing regional pronunciations into this. This is not a debate.
You suck. If we wanted standard English pronunciation we would just go to an online dictionary and click the microphone, SURE. This is more fun as a thread. If you don't want it to be a fun thread, just leave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was growing up, in NY, there were actually slightly different pronunciations for:
Carrie
Kerry
It's all the same to me.
I'm from NY, and those are completely different pronunciations. The PP who hears Aaron/ Erin the same with the "American" (you do realize there are different accents in different parts of America, right?) accent, Aaron is pronounced with a short A like arrow. Erin is pronounced with a short E like error.
Oh, but wait. Arrow and Error (Airrow and Airrer) have the same beginning.Native New Englander but not with the weird Boston accent part.
No New Englander I've known says airrer for error, lol. In the NE I know, arrow and error do not have the same beginning. One starts with "air," the other starts with "eh."
Someone above mentioned Barry vs. berry. Again, these are two different sounds in NE: one starts with "bair" (rhymes with air), the other starts with "beh"-- the same "e" sound in the name "Ed."
The same is true with Carrie/Kerry, Aaron/Erin, and Mary/merry.
As a PP noted above, with the STANDARD English pronunciation, it's as simple as knowing the difference between short a sound and short e sound. I don't know why everyone's bringing regional pronunciations into this. This is not a debate.
Anonymous wrote:How about Sur La Table & gene se qua
Anonymous wrote:How about Sur La Table & gene se qua
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking of G...Which G is a "hard G?"
Get or Giraffe?
Get is hard, giraffe is soft.
The name I struggle with is Lynnea. Baby books say "Lynn Ay Uh" but the one I know is "Lynn A". I like both, but I wouldn't use it unless I was convinced I had the right pronunciation.
Anonymous wrote:That German word for feeling joy at other people's misfortune.