Kira, thanks for that. I was going to embark on a long post about English pronounciation, German pronounciation, regional accents etc. but you saved me doing it.kiramdear wrote:That's what we get for using a language with no set rules and five ways to pronounce any given vowel
Do your day to day ties not have enough jingle jangle?
- ricardo_vicente
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Re: Do your day to day ties not have enough jingle jangle?
Re: Do your day to day ties not have enough jingle jangle?
I s'pose I can think of at least one reason why a guy named 'Adolph' might want to Americanize the sound of his name...
Yeah, good ol' Eng-lish...I'm fine with it I guess, even though none of my ancestors back two generations or more spoke it. (Well, except for the Irish...I guess they were 'encouraged' to learn it some time ago.) It's got it's strong points, but rules of spelling and pronunciation are not among them. It does feature lots of colorful and rhythmic rhyming possibilities, which makes it good for writing pop lyrics, or screaming cadences at young military recruits in which the faithfulness of their wives or girfriends is called into question.
It is a bit ironic that, more than two hundred years after giving the British King the boot, we Yanks are still using his foot to measure everything and speaking his language....but we do butcher and contort the latter on such a regular basis that that alone continues to qualify us as 'rebels'...
Yeah, good ol' Eng-lish...I'm fine with it I guess, even though none of my ancestors back two generations or more spoke it. (Well, except for the Irish...I guess they were 'encouraged' to learn it some time ago.) It's got it's strong points, but rules of spelling and pronunciation are not among them. It does feature lots of colorful and rhythmic rhyming possibilities, which makes it good for writing pop lyrics, or screaming cadences at young military recruits in which the faithfulness of their wives or girfriends is called into question.
It is a bit ironic that, more than two hundred years after giving the British King the boot, we Yanks are still using his foot to measure everything and speaking his language....but we do butcher and contort the latter on such a regular basis that that alone continues to qualify us as 'rebels'...
I didn't get where I am today by being on time...
- jingle_jangle
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Re: Do your day to day ties not have enough jingle jangle?
Adolph made a point about the "back" pronunciation; motives unknown.
Anytime you call RIC, a genie's voice answers and says, "Thank you for calling RickenBACKer". If it's good enough for the genie, it should be good enough for us.
Anytime you call RIC, a genie's voice answers and says, "Thank you for calling RickenBACKer". If it's good enough for the genie, it should be good enough for us.
Re: Do your day to day ties not have enough jingle jangle?
Is that what they call him now?jingle_jangle wrote:Anytime you call RIC, a genie's voice answers and says, "Thank you for calling RickenBACKer". If it's good enough for the genie, it should be good enough for us.
- cassius987
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Re: Do your day to day ties not have enough jingle jangle?
We should all be required to read Iain Banks books as children and start spelling in pure phonetics.kiramdear wrote:That's what we get for using a language with no set rules and five ways to pronounce any given vowel
Re: Do your day to day ties not have enough jingle jangle?
Even my kindergarden level understanding of Greek and Latin has improved my grasp of English by a factor of ten. The new methods sound interesting but I'm afraid it's too late to teach this old dog any new tricks

All I wanna do is rock!
