alright, let me see if my wee american brain can handle this...samuraiweasel said:Ha, ask anyone not from England to pronounce Leicester. I dare you.
Hmmm... 'lace-cher'? 'Lace" as in the fabric?samuraiweasel said:Ha, ask anyone not from England to pronounce Leicester. I dare you.
Do you mean as in they are all related in one way or another to latin? I don't think you mean they are similar in grammar and pronunciation, because french pronunciation is much different than English, and Spanish grammar is a bit different than English.IndomitableSam said:If you can speak English, you can speak French. Both are from the same root language, anyway. Spanish, Italian, and a couple dozen other languages. All similar. I don't know more than a word or two of Spanish or Italian, but I can guess at how they're supposed to be pronounced. I also haven't taken French since about the 8th grade, but I can still pronounce some words properly.T0ad 0f Truth said:IndomitableSam said:-snip-Yeah but Foy-eh and aluminium sound stupidDevetta said:-snip-
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How does foy-er sound better than foih-eh? It sounds like someone from Boston saying "Fire". It's a french word for entry room. If you can't say it properly, call it an entrance room. Or something.
It's sort of both, as it happens. Technically it WAS a *mostly* Germanic language until the Norman Conquest, (centuries of Roman rule notwithstanding) but a few centuries of Anglo-French diaglossia (the use of two separate languages for different purposes and with different implicit statuses) warped it a lot. Even now you can detect that diaglossia in the division between "posh" words and their "vulgar" alternatives: the former are from Greek, Latin or French, whilst the latter are Germanic. Although there are Celtic words as well as words of other origins.davidmc1158 said:Actually, English is descended from German, not French. Different roots. The reason English is so messed up is that a few busybodies in the 1700s decided that English needed a standard set of grammar rules. Unfortunately, they chose the rules for French grammar to develop the English rules from, not the Germanic rules whic actually would have made sense given that English is Germanic in origin!IndomitableSam said:If you can speak English, you can speak French. Both are from the same root language, anyway. Spanish, Italian, and a couple dozen other languages. All similar. I don't know more than a word or two of Spanish or Italian, but I can guess at how they're supposed to be pronounced. I also haven't taken French since about the 8th grade, but I can still pronounce some words properly.
Good man! Now try this one: "Loughborough is in Leicestershire."gmaverick019 said:alright, let me see if my wee american brain can handle this...samuraiweasel said:Ha, ask anyone not from England to pronounce Leicester. I dare you.
i'm gonna guess the c is silent? so that would make the i also not matter...
less-ter?
It's called "English", not American. Also, you have a British guy as your Avatar.Sir Thomas Sean Connery said:The amount of Britishness in this thread is making me want to throw some tea in the ocean...
Dem, dat, dese and dose.Eoghan Kelly said:Im irish, often thanks to our accent we do not pronounce "th"
Three becomes tree
There becomes dere
These becomes dese... etc etc.
No, we the English pronounce it e-rack and 'e-ran.loc978 said:One way you've got an Apple product, the other you've got an electronic rock, or a cyborg named Ron (phonetically, they're ee-rok and ee-ron). I think the Apple products make for a funnier skit [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rw2nkoGLhrE].omega 616 said:Oh, I thought of another one!
Iraq, do Americans think this place is made by apple? "I-rack"? I notice they run as well, by which I mean they say "I-ran", where to?
...but I still pronounce 'em the boring, correct way.
Yeah right in one but im just amazed at the way people pronounce things here ( i moved here from india but have an american accent thanks to school)gmaverick019 said:alright, let me see if my wee american brain can handle this...samuraiweasel said:Ha, ask anyone not from England to pronounce Leicester. I dare you.
i'm gonna guess the c is silent? so that would make the i also not matter...
less-ter?
because it literally is SPELLED that way here, and in other countries also, it keeps consistent with "alumina" (it's source word) for the oxides, such as lanthanum.R4ptur3 said:I used to pronounce scimitar as Shmiter haha.
Also I know it's been said but the way Americans say aluminium. Why, america, WHY!
I believe it's pronounced "Kai-mer-ah." Kai being pronounced like Kai from digimon.Kitty4President said:You know the word "Chimera"?
For years I thought it was pronounced "Chai-murr-ah" (no, I don't know how I got that either). Then one day while playing WoW with 3 friends, one corrected me and claimed it was pronounced "Chee-mu-rah". Then another one cut into the conversation and told us it was "Shim-mur-ah". Finally the last friend stated that it was "Chee-Meir-ah". Then we spent the next half an hour arguing about it.
I still don't know how you pronounce it properly. :/