| Started By | Comment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
TC |
|||
|
A good friend of mine says wooder. It makes me nuts. But then I think I probably grew up saying it like that and my family still does.
|
|||
apparition |
|||
|
I never use the word and I've tried (with limited success) to make sure my kids never use the word.
But ever since I saw "The Hangover", I have a strange, almost obsessive desire to call someone a 'ruhTARD'. |
|||
TroubleInTampa |
|||
Beefcake wrote:My Grandma says Missourah. She's from the boot heel. |
|||
Viking Pete |
|||
|
Zeebra
|
|||
billhill |
|||
|
Jew-le-ry instead of Jew-el-ry
Re-la-tor instead of Re-al-tor |
|||
Baby Jesus Jr |
|||
TC wrote:Gammy's hittin' the bottle again! I'm scared. |
|||
Mister Peepers |
|||
TC wrote:Is that supposed to be water? |
|||
Zeep |
|||
|
I had the same question, Peepers. I'm sitting here saying it to myself and (figuratively) scratching my head.
|
|||
Dictatorship |
|||
|
And ask as aks cracks me up, but I always just pronounce ask as "ass" because the k is so damn much harder to get out! and no, I don't have a
speech impediment, that's the only word that I always fuck up, but nobody notices yay.
|
|||
brokemom |
|||
|
Before the national popularity of Nascar idiocy, the little town in Alabama was Tahl ah dee gah and still is to the locals and old people like me. How the hell
TV idiots got Tahl ah day gah out of Talledega is beyond me. Then again, Mister Peepers probably says PEEcans instead of the proper Pahcahn.
|
|||
Mister Peepers |
|||
|
Depends on whether I'm talking about them in relation to a pie or just talking about the nut in general. In a pie, it is PEEcan. On the ground, they are
PuhCAHNS.
|
|||
cindidindi76 |
|||
Bernard Wrangler wrote: Yeah, I've heard all sorts of butcherings of Chatauqua. And the name of my HS was a native american word, so that always got some fun butcherings too. |
|||
Zeep |
|||
|
NBC correspondent Lisa Myers just did a report featuring a town in "Missourah." Her bio says she was born in Joplin, Mo.
|
|||
Beefcake |
|||
|
Really? You mock people for not knowing how to pronounce local place names? How the fuck am I supposed to know how to pronounce the name of some bumblefuck
shithole in Texas or Florida? And why would I even care?
|
|||
yukugajoob |
|||
|
Beef, your avi TOTALLY matches your ranting post!
|
|||
Beefcake |
|||
|
GO BACK TO SAN FRANCISCO, HIPPY!
|
|||
yukugajoob |
|||
Mister Peepers wrote: So if a dictionary lists multiple pronunciations, it's acceptable, but if a dictionary lists a word that you just happen to not like, it's not OK? From m-w.com (Merriam-Webster, aka THE Dictionary):
nonstandard : regardless
usage Irregardless originated in dialectal American speech in the early 20th century. Its fairly widespread use in speech called it
to the attention of usage commentators as early as 1927. The most frequently repeated remark about it is that "there is no such word." There is such a word, however. It is still used primarily in
speech, although it can be found from time to time in edited prose. Its reputation has not risen over the years, and it is still a long way from general
acceptance. Use regardless instead.
|
|||
Mister Peepers |
|||
yukugajoob wrote: |
|||
yukugajoob |
|||
|
Yet it is still a word. IN THE DICTIONARY!!!!
See? I can type big, too! In color, even! |
|||
Lila Fowler |
|||
|
Someone get the geezer some Geritol tonic STAT.
Usage. Usage. Usage. --> THIS is what legitimises words and language. Like when we all shat on Fred Durst that time for saying "agreeance" when in fact it is a word, and now I hear it all the time. Language is fluid and you geriatrics are getting your blood pressure up over nothing. Especially over English, the most bastardised language of them all. Simmah down and watch the pretty lights in an hour. The "i before e except after c" rule is officially dead too, because it has never been useful ever. ESL students of the world REJOICE. |
|||