Well, are you sure you say May-lay because you are from Britain or because you have been influenced by American culture?CrashBang said:I'm British and I say may-layEerors said:Both ways are correct. U.S. English say May-Lay. U.K. English say Me-Lee.
See: http://www.thefreedictionary.com/melee
Also may-lay, I'm pretty sure, is correct, if we're talking about pronouncing it the way the French do, because it's spelled 'mélée' and the accents over the e makes an 'ay' sound
I think that, even if it does come from the French "mêlée" then the modifiers to the letters were dropped in the English pronunciation of the word. This leaves it open to interpretation as "Mel" and "ee".
For example: Mel-on, not May-lon.
I have heard that U.S. English is actually the closest to how English was spoken pre-revolution, like Quebec-French is closet to colonisation French. It may be the U.K. English is less fixed then U.S. English....
But I'm not a linguist.
Edit: I'm not a linguist so this is purely speculation. Also I'm from England and I say Mee-lee.