"Clabberd" and "weskit"? Weird.
And I don't even know what a forecastle IS.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
"Clabberd" and "weskit"? Weird.
And I don't even know what a forecastle IS.
waistcoat == weskit. clapboard == clabberd, or if you're in a hurry, clab'd.
My dad used to "correct" my pronunciation of Oregon to "ARE-uh-gon" until I got an actual Oregonian to tell him to quit teaching his grandmother how to suck eggs.
Now, my grandmother did consistently say "ARE-uh-gon" and "FlAH-ri-da" and "ARE-ange", but at least she didn't try to impose this all on every person she met.
Still waiting to hear about the snooty way to pronounce "waistcoat."
Vest
Of course, I spent a good twelve years playing the viola, which means I was playing offbeats half of the time.
Katie! My sistah in viola-playing! How much do we hate pizzicato? Almost as much as we hate whole notes.
However, maybe Nora or Tom tried it when they were there.
Dude, if they had it, we tried it. If we tried it, it was awesome. I drank a lot of beer that week, but I know that everything from your bro's pub was really great.
forecastle = foKsil - kind of.
Ha. Like a faux castle. Or faux skill. Faux skill created the forecastle. At least that's the way I'm reading it.
boatswain = bosn
I'm not sure how to say that.
And I don't even know what a forecastle IS.
The front part of a Jewish castle that the mohel cuts off?
But that is still two syllables.
Nutty is great at linguistics, NSM with the counting.
And I don't even know what a forecastle IS.
It's the forward superstructure on a ship.
You guys are totally forgetting "colonel." Which sounds NOTHING like it's spelled. It is completely wrong, and the written and spoken parts of the word aren't even distantly related.
Oh, ITA. And I'm sure if colonels appeared in my novel half as often as sergeants, it'd bug me more.
How would y'all say Sequim, Puyallup, or Tsawwassen?
I didn't know how to say the last one until Plei explained, and I've been here since '99.
I can't actually tell where the emphasis should go, because I'm now earwormed with the Puyallup Fair theme song.
I'm thinking of that old M's commercial, before my time but it's on the Edgar farewell DVD, where he's teaching the rookies how to speak Seattle: "I took my geoduck to Puyallup."
is there no love for the funkiness that is "colonel?"
I love it. Almost as much as I love the English penchant for inserting an invisible F into "lieutenant". It is so very Greek-sounding and counterintuitive.