Before I heard it being said I kept pronouncing the surname “Mangione” as “Man-jee-own” rather than “man-jo-nee” and I’m still ashamed about it lol I’m sorry

  • @[email protected]
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    2629 days ago

    All English town names, by spite and ignorance but mostly spite.

    Oh, I am not pronounching “Glouchestershire” correctly? SPELL it correctly then!

    • slazer2au
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      828 days ago

      There was a YouTube video I watch ages ago and it explained it pretty well.

      The differences depends on who settled the town. Roman, Saxon, or Viking

    • Frenchfryenjoyer (she/her)OP
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      629 days ago

      I have American friends who couldn’t pronounce it. it was always some variant of “Glow-kester-sheer” but tbh I can’t blame them, the spelling doesn’t do the pronunciation justice 😂

      • Skua
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        728 days ago

        Start intentionally pronouncing “Pittsburgh” with the -burgh suffix from Edinburgh or Musselburgh to get them back

    • Björn Tantau
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      228 days ago

      When I was on vacation with my father in Scotland we wanted to see the highland games in Glenisla. We needed directions or needed to know the exact date when they’d take place or so, so we went to some tourist information. That poor girl there had no idea what we wanted when we asked about glennis-law. But she soon figured out that we meant glen-ila.

      The highland games were awesome, btw!

    • Lovable Sidekick
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      428 days ago

      In his comments on the Jeeves & Wooster series Stephen Fry talked a bit about English family names. Among others, he said Mainwaring is pronounced “Mannering”, and Cholmondeley is “Chumley”.

    • Lovable Sidekick
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      28 days ago

      Same here. One of my favorite bit-part actors is Siobhan Fallon, who played the wife of “Egger” in Men in Black. She absolutely stole the few scenes she was in. I didn’t know I was mispronouncing her name for years.

    • @[email protected]
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      327 days ago

      I used to have a work friend named Siobhan and when I’d come home I’d mention her to my partner. Sometimes I would text him about her. He fully thought these were two different people for like a year.

    • Frenchfryenjoyer (she/her)OP
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      628 days ago

      omg I know the feeling. had someone in college named this and I pronounced it the same way until she corrected me and I was so sorry 😭 an apology to Siobhans everywhere!

    • c1a5s1c
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      328 days ago

      came here to say literally THIS name haha, crazy

  • @[email protected]
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    1128 days ago

    Chongqing like “Chongqing Chicken”. not pronounced “chonking”.

    “Añejo”, not pronounced “ah-neh-joe”

    “Hors d’oeuvre”. funnily not pronounced “horse divorce”.

    • snooggums
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      28 days ago

      "Hors d’oeuvre”. funnily not pronounced “horse divorce”.

      That’s a new one and I love it I like calling them “hours devours” which also adds in a non-existing consonant.

      • @[email protected]
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        428 days ago

        yeah, french (and borrowed words) is usually my hard-mode when it comes to pronunciations. this one is special because it’s dessert (or so I think).

        • snooggums
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          228 days ago

          As used around here in the US it is fancy finger foods, usually appetizers. But we also tend to use the words differently than the source, like we use entree for the main part of the meal.

    • Zammy95
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      228 days ago

      Are you combining it in your head with Kristen or Kierstin?

  • @[email protected]
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    628 days ago

    Ghislaine, but I do it on purpose.

    I’m still trying to get some Irish names right in my head, specifically Rhiannon and especially Siobhan.

  • @[email protected]
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    527 days ago

    Gonna use this thread as inspiration to piss off people, thank you for your contributions.

    Also Gyro is pronounced j-eye-roe.

  • Lovable Sidekick
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    428 days ago

    Just mentioned this in another thread - Kraken. I say it phonetically - "krayken - but for some reason the world says “cracken”.

  • @[email protected]
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    126 days ago

    Gillian like Gil in Gilbert and the Gill of a fish not Jill like, well, I honestly still don’t know why it’s spelled Gillian but pronounced Jillian.

  • @[email protected]
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    125 days ago

    Yosemite

    I’ve learned in school quite early that it is pronounced as Yo-semmy-tee, but I deliberately pronounce it Yoh-ze-mite, because it’s funny.

  • Venicone
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    327 days ago

    Two common names in Scotland are Aileen and Eileen but damned if I don’t say the wrong one every time.