Yeah, it's definitely 2 syllables.
Only if you're Yosemite Sam.
Host ,'Why We Fight'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Yeah, it's definitely 2 syllables.
Only if you're Yosemite Sam.
We spent the whole day unearthing and alphabetizing all of our CDs. We have hundreds and hundreds because I am married to a music lover who streams 99.99% of the time , but WHAT IF THINGS BECOME UNAVAILABLE AT SOME DISTANT FUTURE POINT SO WE HAVE TO HAVE EVERY SONG WE HAVE EVER VAGUELY LIKED ON CD AND WE MUST NEVER THROW AWAY EVEN ONE OF THEM EVEN IF WE DON'T EVEN LIKE THE ARTIST. We may have some slight disagreements on this issue, is what I'm getting at.
2 syllables - both ways. awn-ree and orn-ree
Aaron = "Air-ron".
Erin = " Err-rin"
I pronounce "air" and "err" the same, although if I make an effortm I can make the vowels in the second syllables sound different ("-un" vs "-in").
Only if you're Yosemite Sam.
Every once in a while I hit a word where my "Southern Indiana Is Actually Kind of the South" comes out. Apparently, this is one of them.
I, however, pronounce "battery" with 3 syllables, "wrestling" does not have an a in it, and "creek" does not have an i.
Born on a mountain top in Tennessee
Greenest state in the land of the free
Raised in the woods so he knew ev'ry tree
Kilt him a be'are when he was only three
I'm still trying to determine if anyone really pronounces "bear" like that.
(I was watching Fantastic Mr. Fox today, which has that song on the soundtrack).
I'm still trying to determine if anyone really pronounces "bear" like that.
Loretta Lynn is the closest I can think of. More like baarrh
Instead of our usual Memorial Day bike ride on Block Island, a couple of friends and I rode our bikes down to Narragansett Beach today just to see what was going on. Almost nobody was on the actual beach (at around noon), although it was cool (low 60's). There wasn't the usual mass of people (or cars) one usually sees on Memorial Day weekend in these parts.
I'm still trying to determine if anyone really pronounces "bear" like that.
I wish more did. I might not have to grind my teeth at seeing "grin and bare it" written quite so often.
I wish more did. I might not have to grind my teeth at seeing "grin and bare it" written quite so often.
Pretty sure anybody who pronounces bear with two syllables pronounces bare the same way.