
illinois is illinoy
kangamangus is just how it looks.

winnepesaukee is just how it looks

Moderator: Orlion
I have a bunch of cousins who grew up on a farm south of Madison. It tickled me when they would pronounce Wisconsin "Wis-GAHN-sin".Auleliel wrote:I agree on that one too. Why can't people pronounce states' names properly?Mortice Root wrote:It's Wisconsin, not Wesconsin or Wiscansin or Wescansin.
I've heard LOO-uh-vull.aliantha wrote:Same with Louisville, KY: my high school band teacher was from there, and he pronounced it LOO-vull, so that's how I always say it.
My cousins grew up in Norfolk. I never heard the expression as a cheer, but my cousin quoted that Norfolk girls "don't drink, naw smoke, naw f*k."aliantha wrote:Ditto Norfolk, VA: The natives call it NAW-f'ck. (One guy I used to work with claimed that the city's high school cheerleaders used to shout: "We don't drink! We don't smoke! Norfolk! Norfolk! Norfolk!")
I call it Misery as a tribute to the majority of the times I have been there. I've had a couple good times there, but for the handfull of times I've been there, I've had a car accident around Xmas and car broken into to show for it. The car accident was with a car insurance claims agent who pulled up behind me while I was backing EXTREMELY slowly out of a space right next to a monster truck that I couldn't see around. I was mainly watching on that side as well as the occasional glance backward. I know she saw an opportunity and went for it. I saw her a second too late, slammed on the brakes (I swear I couldn't have been going more than 1 mile per hour) and somehow left a little piddly scratch that she decided to claim. Really pissed me off. The second I heard she worked for car insurance, I knew I was screwed. And sure enough, I was, for she knew that if you were hit by someone backing out, you are an instant winner.Wyldewode wrote: No. . . I live here and it is pronounced mi-zoor-ee. My grandfather, who lived in Indiana, always loved to say "misery."![]()
I'm with you on that. If I'm speeding (or whatever) and I get pulled over, I'm hardly going to be happy about it, but I can't blame the police. I used to try and explain this to people when I worked in parking enforcement*. I heard such delights as "Please cancel my parking ticket. I didn't know traffic wardens worked at night." The fact is, if you knew you shouldn't be parking there but you did it anyway, you decided to take your chances and you've only got yourself to blame if you get caught. I don't expect you to like it, but please have enough dignity and self-respect to take it on the chin.sgt.null wrote:people who bitch about the police because they got stopped for doing something illegal.
That's how the original Norfolk (i.e. the county on the east coast of England) is pronounced, so I'd go with that.aliantha wrote:Ditto Norfolk, VA: The natives call it NAW-f'ck.
I've had some arguments about this. I'm pretty much a total relativist, and I've had people come to me with 'any form of relativism is unsupportable'. They mostly cite the Bible as evidence - you know, 'how can you say it's relative when the absolute standard is set down right here?' When that happens, I usually amuse myself by answering that the validity of Biblical tenets is also relative.Tsukasa Logged Out wrote:HUGER pet peeve: People who do not have a firm grasp of basic logic or reason or rhetoric, and cannot understand such a simple concept as cultural relativism.
CovenantJr wrote:That's how the original Norfolk (i.e. the county on the east coast of England) is pronounced, so I'd go with that.aliantha wrote:Ditto Norfolk, VA: The natives call it NAW-f'ck.
I've had some arguments about this. I'm pretty much a total relativist, and I've had people come to me with 'any form of relativism is unsupportable'. They mostly cite the Bible as evidence - you know, 'how can you say it's relative when the absolute standard is set down right here?' When that happens, I usually amuse myself by answering that the validity of Biblical tenets is also relative.Tsukasa Logged Out wrote:HUGER pet peeve: People who do not have a firm grasp of basic logic or reason or rhetoric, and cannot understand such a simple concept as cultural relativism.
It's only Nawlins if you're Cajun. If you're not, don't say it that way unless you can fake a Cajun accent. Instead, say it "New Or-lens".Cheval wrote:I cannot seem to find the right way to pronounce New Orleans.
Is it "New Or-leans",
"New Ah-lee-ins",
or (as the Cajun say), "Naw-lins"?