I’ve always pronounced the word “Southern” to rhyme with howthurn. I know most people say it like “suthurn” instead. I didn’t realize that the way I pronounce it is considered weird until recently!

  • Tiefling IRL
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    6 days ago

    I’m fluent in both Spanish and English (obv). When speaking English, I’m conflicted on whether I should pronounce Spanish loan words in a shitty English accent like everyone else, or in a proper Spanish accent. So instead I pronounce them as horribly as I can.

    Jalapeño is “yah-la-PEEN-oh”. Fajita is “fa-JAI-tah”. Quesadilla gets “QUAY-sah-dilah”

    (As a joke of course)

    • Björn Tantau
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      116 days ago

      Overheard in a pizzeria:

      Customer: I’d like a quattro sta… quattro shta… How do you pronounce it?

      The Turkish and not Italian waiter: Shtuh gon ee (for stagioni)

    • Tanis Nikana
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      56 days ago

      Once in a while, I’ll arbitrarily drop juh-LAP-in-oh in a grocery store, just to see who flinches.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        In the army it was “Qu’est-ce que le shake?” or so, for “what’s shakin?”

        I worked with a guy who did the exactly opposite, in Calgary (and that may explain a lot):

        • comPLETEly fluent in French
        • would only speak French by imitating those early “Bonjour Pierre!” tapes with the over-done voice pitch.

        It was both impressive as hell, and funny. And he’d do this for like a few minutes at a time as part of a conversation. We’d try and get him to break but his vocab was strong (for an anglo) and he’d never break character. I fantasize about him meeting my Parisienne friend and conversing back and forth, her a little stereotypical and him a little bizarre.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 days ago

      I like it!

      Quesadilla looks like there’s room to mangle it further:

      KWEZZ-ah-dill-ah

      or even

      kwe-SADD-l’a

      like there was saddle in there