• @Preacher
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    5616 hours ago

    One dnd session, the dm described the room as having flaming braziers. He pronounced them as “brassieres.”

    We never let him forget.

    • @Caboose12000
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      26 hours ago

      a friend of mine wants to know how to actually pronounce braziers. what a dumb friend, right?

      • Robust Mirror
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        11 hour ago

        The magic of the modern day means you can type “define” or “pronounce” then any word into Google and it’ll tell you how to say it. There’s also an absurd amount of YouTube pronunciation videos for basically every word that exists.

        Not that there’s a problem asking, this is more advice for future words your friend doesn’t know. So you can help them. The dummy.

    • @[email protected]
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      611 hours ago

      I still mispronounce those words from time to time, and I bloody well know how they’re supposed to be said.

    • @ninjabard
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      915 hours ago

      Had a DM that did the same thing. A different dm pronounced chitin as chai-tin

      • @[email protected]
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        12 hours ago

        The DM for Critical Role did that in one of the early episodes. I think that if you’re making a podcast, you should check your words for pronunciation.

        • @[email protected]
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          711 hours ago

          How are you going to bring up early CR Matthew Mercer without his most infamous pronunciation gaffe?

          Sigil* as “siggle”. If I were at that table, I’d still be ribbing him about it (good-naturedly, of course).

          ^*SIJ-uhl

        • @[email protected]
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          312 hours ago

          I imagine Dan Carlin gets a lot of crap over “Makedon” instead of “Macedon” just because he’s being extra

      • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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        512 hours ago

        I learned chitin from playing Morrowind. Pronounced it like “chit in” (like in “chip”). But also my local dialect/accent tends to drop pronouncing t’s so it came out more like “chi’in”. To this day it’s an active effort to pronounce it correctly if I ever have to say it out loud

        • @[email protected]
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          1112 hours ago

          Okay, so I’ve just realised I’ve been pronouncing this wrong.

          So I’ve been pronouncing it “chit in”, probably as above - perhaps halfway between “chicken” and “shit in”.

          Apparently it’s pronounced “kite in”.

          Not that it’s a word that crops up too much, but I’ve almost certainly made other people say it wrong too :(

    • @edgemaster72
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      211 hours ago

      I did that once, but I’m pretty sure my group has long since forgotten