• HobbitFoot
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    293 months ago

    There was a disagreement on how to pronounce Arkansas; the first two US senators from Arkansas disagreed on how to say it.

    Congress ended up having to request the Arkansas legislature in defining how to pronounce the state name.

    • @WhatAmLemmy
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      353 months ago

      If you want people to call you Arkansaw, don’t spell it Arkansas. Thankyou for coming to my TED Talk.

      • @Stovetop
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        63 months ago

        French language be like:

  • @DaMonsterKnees
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    283 months ago

    I, an east coaster, once bought a car from Texarkana. When I learned it was literally on the border of Texas and Arkansas, I think my brain broke. Great share, thanks!

    • pruwyben
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      133 months ago

      Wait till you hear where Calexico and Mexicali are.

    • @wjrii
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      73 months ago

      Well, which Texarkana did you buy it from?

      • @DaMonsterKnees
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        33 months ago

        Arkansas side. Drunken ebay purchase out in the sticks that amazingly worked out. '72 olds 98 that sounded like a c47 on approach. Thanks for listening to my lame nonsense.

  • @mkwt
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    173 months ago

    Here’s the really crazy thing.

    Ark City, KS is located on the Ar-KAN-sas River. But this is the same river that flows through Little Rock under the name AR-kan-saw.

    • @[email protected]
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      123 months ago

      We come through and destroy an entire native civilization, and as a final “fuck you” we butcher their dead languages and name military equipment after them.

      • @RememberTheApollo_
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        53 months ago

        Oh, don’t forget putting towns named after some of the military officials that subjugated them on their reservation land.

    • @[email protected]
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      73 months ago

      The Mackinac Bridge connects the lower and upper peninsulas of Michigan. It is in Mackinaw City. There is a nearby island, Mackinac.

      The bridge is mackin-awwh.
      The city is mackin-awwh.
      The island is mackin-awwh.

  • @Harvey656
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    123 months ago

    Arkansas is pronounced Arr-Kansas already though. ;)

  • @NOT_RICK
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    123 months ago

    There’s a Newark NJ and a Newark DE.

    The Jersey one is pronounced Newurk and the Delaware one is pronounced New Ark. It’s mildly inconvenient.

    • @wjrii
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      3 months ago

      The little town in Texas is also “New Ark”.

      Some of my other favorites:

      Texas

      • Montague = mon-TAYG (hard ‘g’)
      • Italy = IT-lee (2 syllables)
      • Buda = BUD-duh (EDIT: or is it BYOO-duh ?)

      Georgia

      • Vienna = VYE-eena
      • Cairo = KAY-roe

      Canada (less experience here, tbf)

      • Newfoundland = NEW-fin-LAND (do NOT slur the “land” part. Enunciate!)
      • Optional
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        33 months ago

        Arab, Alabama. (Ay-rab)

      • @ninjabard
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        23 months ago

        Texas has so many. Bogota pronounced buh-GO-duh

        Arkansas has a Lafayette county pronounced luh-FAY-it even though that county literally borders Louisiana.

        Don’t even get me started on Bowie, DeKalb, or Houston.

        • flicker
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          13 months ago

          I’m gonna add one I love trotting out from Oklahoma.

          There’s a Miami, Oklahoma. It’s pronounced My-am-uh.

          I’ve got about a billion from Oklahoma specifically.

          • @ninjabard
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            13 months ago

            There’s a Miami in Arizona the locals pronounce the same way.

        • @ripcord
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          13 months ago

          Ah yes. “Hoo-ston” and “How-ston” are definitely both things.

          “De-kab” and “De-kalb”

          Haven’t run into the Bowie one.

          • @ninjabard
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            3 months ago

            In Texas it’s Boo-wee. That was the man’s name as is the knife that bears it. Outside of Texas people mispronounce it as Bow-ee like Ziggy Stardust.

            If you’re talking about David (rest in power) Bowie, then it’s Bow-ee. But the knife is Boo-wee.

      • KingJalopy
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        13 months ago

        Company I work for is based in Buda but everyone pronounces it “byooduh”.

        • @wjrii
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          13 months ago

          I defer to you then. I just know it’s not Booduh like it god damned well should be. Was reminded elsewhere in this thread that we also have a Ne-VAY-duh in Texas, to say nothing of the Native American placenames that almost every state has specifically to fuck with newcomers, even though they undoubtedly moved from a state that has its own examples.

          • KingJalopy
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            13 months ago

            Lol, that’s what I thought it was until they corrected me on the phone. I don’t live anywhere near there but that’s how they say it to me.

    • tiredofsametab
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      13 months ago

      There’s also a Newark Ohio which is pronounced something like ‘nu-urk’ or even ‘nurk’ by some (the latter I always took as people being silly, but I don’t even know anymore).

  • tiredofsametab
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    53 months ago

    Ohio is great for shit pronunciations of town names.

    Bellfountaine - bell FOUN’n (the t drops there in most dialects, some would say ‘fountain’ with the the first syllable stressed).

    Versailles - verSAILS

    Medina - muhDYEnuh

    • Flying Squid
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      3 months ago

      We have “verSAILS” in Indiana too. Also:

      Peru - Pee-roo

      Russiaville - Roosha-vil

      Lebanon - Leb’nun

      My favorite though is that there are two spellings for the Wabash river: Wabash and Ouabache. And despite being in a town that is on the Wabash River, the local Oabache Elementary School is pronounced: Wah-bat-shee.

      • tiredofsametab
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        23 months ago

        I think y’all also have KAY-row (Cairo) if I remember right. (or maybe that’s Illinois?)

      • @hate2bme
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        23 months ago

        Right down the road from Versailles is the town I grew up in and the movie Hoosiers is based off of. Milan (pronounced my - lan)

      • @[email protected]
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        23 months ago

        The pronunciation of Lebanon you called out may sound like it came from a hayseed, but it’s closer to the way people in the country of Lebanon pronounce it than the mainstream American pronunciation.

      • tiredofsametab
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        13 months ago

        or rio grande (rye-oh grand).

        I’m not sure how Gallipolis should actually be pronounced. The ~polis suffix seems sensible enough, but not sure on the first part.

    • nelson
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      13 months ago

      My extended family is from a tiny Ohio hill town named Antioch, pronounced “annie-OCK”.

      • tiredofsametab
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        13 months ago

        I’ve been there a couple of times. I say the ‘t’ in anti, but I guess the locals don’t

  • @mrsemi
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    3 months ago

    deleted by creator

    • @wjrii
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      23 months ago

      Natchitoches, Louisiana (/ˈnækətəʃ/ NAK-ə-təsh), or “Nakadish”

      Yet Nacogdoches, Texas is more or less how you would think, Nack-uh-doe-chiss.

      • @mrsemi
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        03 months ago

        deleted by creator

        • @wjrii
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          13 months ago

          Well, I reckon that phrase “more or less” that I put in my previous comment is having to do a fair bit of work.

    • Cadeillac
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      13 months ago

      That’s how they pronounce Nevada County in Arkansas. Also, Dierks is Dereks. I’m sure there are more that will come to me