It's because you didn't have a strong father figure isn't it?

Joyce ,'Chosen'


Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


Shir - Feb 03, 2010 7:34:06 am PST #8940 of 30000
"And that's why God Almighty gave us fire insurance and the public defender".

It's time to get ready to leave uni when the shelves numbers of the books you're looking for are starting to look funny/cool, right?


Nora Deirdre - Feb 03, 2010 7:36:37 am PST #8941 of 30000
I’m responsible for my own happiness? I can’t even be responsible for my own breakfast! (Bojack Horseman)

How do you pronounce it, Nora?

Mick-GUN-eh-gull


brenda m - Feb 03, 2010 7:43:40 am PST #8942 of 30000
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Now, the weird thing with Names of Family and Names of Buffistas, for me, is that Seska and The Girl's real names are just as my mother's first name and one of her sisters.

I hear you. My grandmother's name was Grace Matilda.


P.M. Marc - Feb 03, 2010 7:46:49 am PST #8943 of 30000
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Yeah, welcome to my world. It's just a "t." It's nothing complicated or foreign to the US or UK ear. Everyone usually says it right once.

I have to concentrate to say the t, I'll confess. But I slip sounds together like whoa, and say my Fs as Vs and a whole bunch of other stuff.

Mick-GUN-eh-gull

Pretty close, then. (Aunt Dean's friend is Mick-GUN-uh-gull)


Ginger - Feb 03, 2010 7:50:49 am PST #8944 of 30000
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

My name is awesome for confusing people. "Laura? Maura? Norma? Dora?" and then do not even get me started on my last name.

I immediately think of "A Doll's House," but I suppose "like Ibsen's Nora" might not get you very far in some circles. I have had to spell Ginger more times than you'd think, even after I do my "ginger ale, gingerbread, ginger snaps" routine. Most people won't even attempt my last name, which we pronounce the way one would pronounce any typical English word. I've heard the way Czechs really pronounce it, but I can't replicate it, plus I understand I should have a feminine ending on it. My great grandfather came over in the 1870s, so we're pretty far away from the old county.

I also have Zenkitty's problem, in that I was named for my mother and therefore have always been Ginger, to avoid confusion. I get checks made out to Ginger and I often forget whether I've used Ginger or Virginia when I signed up for something.


smonster - Feb 03, 2010 7:52:59 am PST #8945 of 30000
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

~ma for Nora!

I think a lot of people are like my dad, who seems to need to map a new word onto the pattern of one he already knows.

A guy I work with is like this, to the extreme. I've gotten pretty good at not letting momentary confusion show on my face.

Oh, and in case people here are wondering how to pronounce my name:

Wuz doin it wrong.

Mick-GUN-eh-gull

Wuz doin it rite!

ita, do you pronounce it with an aspirated "t" or the elided palatal "t" used in, for example, "butter?" I think you've said before but I wasn't around or don't remember.

People pronounce my name just fine. It's the spelling that screws them up. All three of my names have common alternate spellings.


WindSparrow - Feb 03, 2010 7:54:28 am PST #8946 of 30000
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

Then, just in general life, people who can't remember my name call me Nancy, Naomi, Renee, and one woman consistantly called me Chantel.

As an Andrea, I get Annie, Audrey, Angie, and Angela on a regular basis. When I moved to Arizona, for many people it simply did not register in any part of their brains when I would say it with that Mid-West short-a shoved through the nose, but once I started saying it Ahn-drey-uh, they had no trouble. Then I came back with the Mid-West, and kept the Arizona pronunciation because I like it, and it just doesn't register, again.

As I work with/care for people whose skill at speech vary wildly, there are a couple of them that I told, "My name is Andrea, but you can call me Anna." Those two have a bossy housemate who also has a hearing impairment, who give them talkings-to for calling me "Alla". So I tell her that it is a nick-name that I have given them permission to use - but since she makes such a fuss about what other people are doing, she has to call me Andrea.

Oh, and in case people here are wondering how to pronounce my name:

Wuz doin it wrong.

Me too. Of course, now I'm going to have to pronounce it the way I do "shi*" when I get halfway through the word, and realize I'm at work and don't want to swear in front of the residents. So apparently the silent r stands for looking around to see if anyone caught me.


Vortex - Feb 03, 2010 7:57:33 am PST #8947 of 30000
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

I immediately think of "A Doll's House," but I suppose "like Ibsen's Nora" might not get you very far in some circles.

I think of Nick and Nora, but that wouldn't fly with the younguns, I think.


§ ita § - Feb 03, 2010 7:58:45 am PST #8948 of 30000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

do you pronounce it with an aspirated "t" or the elided palatal "t" used in, for example, "butter?"

Can you give me a pronunciation example of an aspirated "t"? I'd have described it that way, but I think I also pronounce it the same way as the ts in butter. I did have a friend who said I pronounced both ts in "little" so it's possible I just speak funny.


Barb - Feb 03, 2010 8:12:27 am PST #8949 of 30000
“Not dead yet!”

I think of Nick and Nora, but that wouldn't fly with the younguns, I think.

It might if you mention "Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist."