• @joe_archer
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    65 hours ago

    All of the idiots in this thread thinking they know how it’s pronounced.

    It’s pronounced charon. SMH.

    • @[email protected]
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      37 hours ago

      Wouldn’t make sense for the moon to be different than the god since it’s named after him (hence why they chose that name for a moon of Pluto, lord of the underworld).

      • geogle
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        37 hours ago

        Named for a dude’s wife, Charlene, and shorthorns into an appropriate mythological figure

      • Zagorath
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        311 hours ago

        Yeah that’s how I’d pronounce it too, as a native English speaker.

    • @Darkard
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      11 hours ago

      Sharon

      Pronounce the Ch like Chiropodist.

      Hmm? Cherry picked example? No, I’m more of a rum man myself.

    • FuglyDuck
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      211 hours ago

      This is typically how it’s pronounced in english.

      in greek, the C is basically silent, and it’s pronounced like Hair-on,

        • FuglyDuck
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          -310 hours ago

          nobody really speaks ancient greek.

          I think that’s something that a lot of people (astronomers, in particular) seem to forget. This would be like walking around town speaking Middle English. Nobody would understand you. You’ve never heard one of Shakespear’s plays in the same langauge Shakespear did- he used Early Modern English, and every play has been adapted to modern audiences;

          some more fun facts… Charon, the moon, was technically named after Jame’s Chrsity’s wife. (he’s the guy who found Charon.)… her name was Charlene. though he did see the connection to the ferryman of greek myths and find that appropriate as well. he pronounced it Shar-on

          So. All that to say… Pronounce it how you like, there’s options.

    • @lath
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      211 hours ago

      Car on.

  • @[email protected]
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    510 hours ago

    I always found it funny to read it as Sharon, and now you’re telling me it’s named after someone called Charlene? This keeps getting better