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Thread: Nyow Zullin Unglush

  1. #136
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    Quote Originally Posted by yod View Post
    They should?

    According to whom?
    Quote Originally Posted by Ragingrob View Post
    Where do you draw the line between sloppiness and difference in accent?
    They're different words, for heaven's sake.
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  2. #137
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hitcher View Post
    They're different words, for heaven's sake.
    How do you pronounce "real" any different to "reel"? How about "right" and "write", oh and "wright" and "rite"? "I" and "eye"? "For", "fore" and "four"? "Heard" and "herd"? "To", "two" and "too"? "Allowed" and "aloud"? "Arc" and "ark"?

    And how about :

    Attendance Attendants
    Bail Bale
    Bare Bear
    Bases Basis
    Be Bee
    Beat Beet
    Berry Bury
    Berth Birth
    Billed Build
    Blew Blue
    Bloc Block
    Bored Board
    Bolder Boulder
    Born Borne
    Brake Break
    Bridal Bridle
    Broach Brooch
    Cache Cash
    Callous Callus
    Cede Seed
    Ceiling Sealing
    Cell Sell
    Cellar Seller
    Cereal Serial
    Cession Session
    Chews Choose
    Chord Cord
    Chute Shoot
    Creak Creek
    Flew Flu
    Hi High
    Knight Night
    Knot Not
    Know No
    Knows Nose
    Made Maid
    Missed Mist
    One Won
    Oar Or
    Ode Owed
    Paw Pour
    Plain Plane
    Pray Prey
    Read Reed
    Review Revue
    Scent Sent
    Sea See
    Sew So
    Shore Sure
    Straight Strait
    Tare Tear
    Threw Through
    Toe Tow
    Told Tolled
    Wait Weight



    I'm pretty shore (sure?) that their (there) all different words.

  3. #138
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ragingrob View Post
    That is my point. Why "should" they be pronounced differently? They don't seem to be any different with our New Zealand English.

    Where do you draw the line between sloppiness and difference in accent?
    Quote Originally Posted by Hitcher View Post
    They're different words, for heaven's sake.
    That really has no bearing, I give you 'weight' and 'wait' as examples.

    Ragingrob is quite correct. It is perfectly natural for language to develop and evolve with time. The only languages that don't are dead; i.e. no longer in use. This includes pronunciation, use and subsequently spelling, in many cases. If this wasn't the case we could quite justifiably complain about the incorrect pronunciation of 'weight' or 'height' or 'assign' or anything that contains 'ph', or proper names such as Gloucester, Worcester, Leicester, Manchester, Winchester, etc, which, even further back down the dusty socio-linguistic trail, stemmed from the Latin 'castra', meaning camp.
    I guarantee we aren't pronouncing these as they once were.
    F M S

  4. #139
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ragingrob View Post
    I'm pretty shore (sure?) that their (there) all different words.
    But those ones don't irritate me so much.
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  5. #140
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    "No one appreciates the very special genius of your conversation as the dog does."

  6. #141
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    Quote Originally Posted by yungatart View Post
    I worked in a lunch bar some years ago..one of our regular customers would always ask for a slice of "kwichy". The first time I served him, I needed the boss to interpret for me as I had no idea what he meant...
    Ok I'll ask the stupid question... what the heck is kwichy???

    I have occasionally been known to lip read , (being I can't hear stuff sometimes) and it has been my observation that it is a lot easier to understand someone who is comfortable with how they speak, than it is to understand someone who is trying to over-pronounce or have precise diction (sp?) if this is not how they usually speak.

    ALL mumbling is awful and mumblers who look at the ground or cover their mouth should all be shot.
    It would be just great if I could just get everyone who is talking to me to just look at me when they speak and not mumble.
    I mean FFS if someone can not hear you and asked you to repeat yourself, then all you have to do is just repeat yourself clearly...not
    O V E R
    P R O N O U N C E
    E V E R Y
    S Y L A B L E
    like your talking to a retard... grrrrr

    ok rant over...as you were
    great thread
    I wouldn’t be broke if the voices in my head paid rent

  7. #142
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    quiche maybe?
    ...she took the KT, and left me the Buell to ride....(Blues Brothers)

  8. #143
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    Quote Originally Posted by idb View Post
    quiche maybe?
    of course. That makes sense.
    I wouldn’t be broke if the voices in my head paid rent

  9. #144
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    The few that I notice the most:

    "it's" instead of "its" (or vice versa)
    "brought" instead of "bought"
    "their" instead of "they're / they are" (or "theyre" instead of "their")

    Quote Originally Posted by Oscar View Post
    Not of French origin.
    The "H" is not silent.
    Is the H in English silent only for words of French origin? In French, H is not always silent, either. I can't remember why some are, it surely has something to do with Latin.

    Quote Originally Posted by Ragingrob View Post
    One thing that pisses me off, is how people try and say place names in the pronounciation of the origin language. Throughout the America's Cup, TV and radio hosts spent hours trying to say "Valenthia" as opposed to how an average Kiwi would read "Valencia" as it stands.
    That's what I thought until I started travelling. It's often easier to say the place names in their original language than learn every possible translation. Just let others do what they prefer, as long as you understand them.

    Quote Originally Posted by Ragingrob View Post
    I study two European languages at Uni and here's another thing that grinds my gears! Why the fuck should we be learning to speak another language with exactly the same pronounciation? I want to learn French and Spanish and speak it in my own accent thank you very much. Of course it's necessary to speak somewhat the original pronounciation in terms of how words are said, but man the goody goods in the class piss me off when they try to put on a full-French accent!
    Well, I still face so many kiwis who laugh at my accent even when they perfectly understand what I mean that I'm quite happy to return the favour given the chance. Plus, with the right accent, you'll have more chances to be understood.

  10. #145
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jiminy View Post

    Is the H in English silent only for words of French origin? In French, H is not always silent, either. I can't remember why some are, it surely has something to do with Latin.


    In context, the discussion was about "An Hotel" as opposed to "A Horse".

    Notwithstanding linguistic origin, the "H" is silent in the former, hence the use of "an" as opposed to "a".

  11. #146
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    The usual convention is that if the first letter of a word is a vowel or is pronounced as a vowel, then it should be preceded by a. If it can't, then an should be used.

    e.g. A Yamaha, an FJR.

    The whole horse/hotel/hippopotamus thing is a bit overdone really. Use whatever floats your boat.
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  12. #147
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    In an 'artford, an 'ereford and an 'ampshire, an 'urricane 'ardly h'ever 'appens?
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  13. #148
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ragingrob View Post
    Some people have gone on to me about the "ear" and "air" difference in pronounciation, but I think it's all in their head, couldn't hear any difference in what they were saying at all!
    Please, I hope you are pulling my leg. Surely you can hear, and pronounce, the difference between "ear" and "air"!

  14. #149
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jiminy View Post
    The few that I notice the most:

    Is the H in English silent only for words of French origin? In French, H is not always silent, either. I can't remember why some are, it surely has something to do with Latin.
    "H" is always silent in French

    Quote Originally Posted by Okey Dokey View Post
    Please, I hope you are pulling my leg. Surely you can hear, and pronounce, the difference between "ear" and "air"!

    Umm, nope I don't believe so. Maybe it's because noone pronounces them "properly"? Write them out how they sound, maybe I'll be able to see what the difference is supposedly meant to be.

  15. #150
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ragingrob View Post
    "H" is always silent in French
    And as I've said before: Like the 'p' in swimming is silent...
    Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........
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