Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This.
This is your fault for the company you keep. This isn’t what the thread is about
Why is this different? I know a few young (white, if that is where you are going) female employees who still pronounce a few words as if they are still in their teens. Fustrate is one of them. Libarry is another.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This.
This is your fault for the company you keep. This isn’t what the thread is about
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you all say associate?
Ah-so-c-ate for associating with someone.
Ah-so-c-it for someone I work with.
Anonymous wrote:How do you all say associate?
Anonymous wrote: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.
This.
Anonymous wrote:I thought biopic was bi- OPIC instead of BI-oh-pic.
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.
You sound odd. Kids mispronounce things all the time and adults laugh at that all the time. Nothing to hold a grudge against your own mother for. My 10 year sometimes still says Pacific instead of specific and we laugh at her and correct her.
Anonymous wrote:Mischievous - I pronounced wrong for years until someone pointed it out. I have since heard several famous people like Julia Roberts pronounce it wrong as well...made me feel a little better.
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: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.
Chia-puss? What word is this supposed to be?