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Posted: Thu May 01, 2008 5:44 pm
by Blackhawk
speaking of puissance... the first definition says its a competitive test of a horses ability to jump large obstacles in show jumping.
the second says archaic or poetic/literary great power, influence or prowess.
he loves this word because im halfway through the second chronicles and have heard it 5 times so far.
i pronounced it Puzzyence.
Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 3:53 am
by Ur Dead
From the GI..
Really, I believe that the "correct" pronunciation is the one that works for the particular reader. After all, story-telling in print is an interactive process, and the reader's contributions are both necessary and valid. But I personally say:
ha-ROO-chai (where "ai" is pronounced "eye").
(02/29/2004)
So it's ha-ROO-ch(I)
Posted: Mon May 05, 2008 7:51 am
by transient
I recall from High school days (circa 1963)reading Shakespeare that the word puissant came up. ."..most puissant Caesar...". My trusty Shorter Oxford on Historical Principles has it as Power,strength, force, might, influence. One pronunciation is along lines of pwi-sans
With all SRD words as with Tolkien, Herbert and the like I always tend to prefer my own pronunciation than the dictionary. If we own the pictures in our head, I guess we own the sound of the word regardless of some obscure philological rule book.
We here in Oz probably defy most of the general English speaking world rules on pronunciation in any case. My preference is to utilise neo-melanesian vowels such as:
ai = eye
a = u as in up
au = ow as in owl
i = ee
o = or
u = oo
when confronted by words that have a less than english look about them. Works for me.
haruchai = haroocheye
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 12:54 am
by Audio Covenant
wayfriend wrote:What about
- "Melenkurion abatha! Duroc minas mill khabaal!"
That would be an interesting one to hear Mr. Brick pronounce. I say
MELL-en-KOOR-ee-un A-ba-tha! DURE-ock MINN-us MILL ka-BAHL!
Ask and you shall receive.
When I asked him how to pronounce it, this is what Donaldson said, including his little joke at the beginning:
"Watching out for sudden thunder and appearances of mystical events: mel-en-KOO-ree-yun uh-BAH-thuh. DOO-rok MIE-nus MIL. huh-RAHD kuh-BAHL."
Best,
Scott Brick
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 8:34 am
by Blackhawk
is the huh rahd the missing seventh word that i have never heard or had seen??? hehe I always tried to count them out.... 1 Melen 2 Kurion 3 Abatha 4 Duroc 5 Minos 6 Mill 7 Kabaal
so its really
1 Melenkurion 2 Abatha 3 Duroc 4 Minos 5 Mill 6 Huhrad 7 Kabaal?
how could i have overlooked that so often.....Huhrad
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 11:18 am
by amanibhavam
actually it was a massive FR spoiler...
the word is Harad afaik
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 4:17 pm
by I'm Murrin
Calling it a "massive spoiler" is overstating it just a little.
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 5:49 pm
by Spiral Jacobs
The first time I read the Gap series I didn't know Thermopyle was (probably) pronounced like Thermopylae, so when Nick makes his 'thermo-pile' joke I thought oh.
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 5:57 pm
by Cameraman Jenn
I did the SAME thing SJ.

Mea culpa
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 6:48 pm
by Audio Covenant
wayfriend wrote:What about
- "Melenkurion abatha! Duroc minas mill khabaal!"
That would be an interesting one to hear Mr. Brick pronounce. I say
MELL-en-KOOR-ee-un A-ba-tha! DURE-ock MINN-us MILL ka-BAHL!
Sorry everyone, didn't realize I'd given a pronunciation from FATAL REVENANT, hope I didn't ruin anything for anyone. My apologies.
Regarding the above pronunciation, here's how SRD pronounces it:
mel-en-KOO-ree-yun uh-BAH-thuh. DOO-rok MIE-nus MIL kuh-BAHL.
Best,
Scott
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 8:42 pm
by Blackhawk
sorry . I havent read Fatal Revenant so i thought i missed something in the first two.
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 10:18 pm
by drew
I always prounanced the 'H' in Haruchai..until one time while reading the second chrons...I noticed at one point, an '
An' before the word...making me beleive, that the 'H' is pretty much silent.
A Haruchai
or
An Haruchai

Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 12:46 pm
by stonemaybe
Having a smattering of Irish (Gaelic) really messes up SRD pronunciations.... h after a consonant in gaelic completely changes the sound, and the pronunciation of said consonant+h also depends on the vowel after it. Which is really messed up when you're a 12yo with a teacher who insists on talking instead of writing! Especially as the h goes in or doesn't depending on the case of the noun. (originally there weren't hs at all, there was a dot over the consonant called a shavu or something like that)
eg b=b
bha=wa
bhe=ve
d=d
dh=silent
Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 9:47 pm
by drew
doesn't
LL=an 'f' sound too?
I heard that's where the name Floyd comes from..origionally Lloyd.
Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 9:57 pm
by Cameraman Jenn
so that would make Llaura sound like flaura?
Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 10:23 pm
by IrrationalSanity
Actually, I think Fauna make much more sound than flaura...

Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 12:32 am
by wayfriend
Sometimes people use "an" rather than "a" before a word that begins with H. This doesn't mean the H is silent. It's a variation on a grammatical rule. I think it's more British than US English.
Dr. Grammar wrote:The theory behind using an in such a context, however, is that the h- is very weak when the accent is on the second rather than the first syllable (giving rise, by analogy, to an habitual offender, an humanitarian, an hallucinatory image, and an harassed schoolteacher). Thus no authority countenances an history[emphasis added], though a few older ones prefer an historian and an historical.
So if it's ha-ROO-chie, then "an" can be appropriate.
"LL" does not make an F sound, as far as I know, ever.
Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 11:49 am
by drew
Not really a teeth-on-the-lower-lip 'F'...more of a throaty
'gh'-y sound.
Anyways...as this thread is titled "How the hell do YOU pronounce that" ..I'm just saying, that I used to call them
'Ha-Roo-Chi'
after reading that one 'an'
I started pronouncing them
'Ar-Oo-Kai'
Posted: Thu May 15, 2008 11:11 am
by Ranyhyn Ruby
What a great thread - i was too chicken to start it myself but was wondering the same thing after reading FR - just what is the proper way to pronounce all these words that I've been reading for years? Its funny how you pronounce things in your head isn't it? - its nothing like the real thing inside my head as it turns out....
I "read"
RAD-HAM-EARL
ATE-AIR-E-ON
HA-ROO-SHAY
RAN-E-HYN
RAY-MAN
ELO-HIM
KO-ER-CRY
The one I stumble on is ELEMESNEDENE. What do others suggest for that? I think I tend to skip over it when I read it - it ends up something like ELEM-SNEDE or such like.
Or what about BRATHAIRREALM. what a mouthful - BRAYTH-AIR-REALM?
I new PUISSANCE (I think) being a horsey person - PEW-SONSE I think it is.

Ruby
Posted: Thu May 15, 2008 3:14 pm
by wayfriend
Welcome to the Watch, Ranyhyn Ruby of the Horsey People!
For me, I say EL-eh-MEZ-neh-DEEN (5 sylables, in meter, sort of like "elementary") and BRA-THAYR-RELM (almost the same stress on all three syllables, like when you say "overwhelmed").