Lord Bracknell
On fire
An Old Git replies ...Just about every person I speak to who is under 30 says Haitch, including a couple of teachers they can't all be ****wits can they?
Of course they can.
An Old Git replies ...Just about every person I speak to who is under 30 says Haitch, including a couple of teachers they can't all be ****wits can they?
Do you not remember Glenda Jackson mispronouncing the 'erb as ORREG-ERNO in Sunday Bloody Sunday?As in ba-zil not bay-zil and ory-gano not oh-reg-ah-no. Even worse, since when did route (as in Route 66) become rout?
Let's move the debate up a notch..........
Scones.
Pronounced fracar
But then I was shocked when I learned that some people pronounce herbs as erbs. As in erbs and spices. Sounds so wrong. I think its an american thing.
There is no debate. Scone rhymes with gone. Anyone that says otherwise is simply wrong.
I was just as shocked to find [MENTION=70]Easy 10[/MENTION] not using an initial capital letter for a proper noun.
As strange as the "erbs" thing is their pronounciation of Graham (which is "Gram"), and caramel (which is "car-mel").
That was poor on my part. I have no defence (or DEE-fence, as our colonial cousins would say).
I had a debate with an American over the pronunciation of kebab once. I say kebab (as in Phil Babb), they insisted it was pronounced kebaaab (like a sheep saying baah-b). I pointed out that we invented the bloody language, but that cut no ice.
I hate to tell you this, but kebab is a Turkish word.
As in ba-zil not bay-zil and ory-gano not oh-reg-ah-no. Even worse, since when did route (as in Route 66) become rout?
I knew an American called Gerald, pronounced with a hard G (as in "gubbins"). He wrote children's books, so was obviously engaged in some sort of conspiracy to undermine young people's understanding of English.I was just as shocked to find [MENTION=70]Easy 10[/MENTION] not using an initial capital letter for a proper noun.
As strange as the "erbs" thing is their pronounciation of Graham (which is "Gram"), and caramel (which is "car-mel").
SImilar to their insistence that Bernhard Langer's surname is pronounced Laaaanger. They just don't use short vowels. I well remember how they used to pronounce Milosovitch as Milowsowvitch (as in "oh").That was poor on my part. I have no defence (or DEE-fence, as our colonial cousins would say).
I had a debate with an American over the pronunciation of kebab once. I say kebab (as in Phil Babb), they insisted it was pronounced kebaaab (like a sheep saying baah-b). I pointed out that we invented the bloody language, but that cut no ice.