Oh-gul. I think. But it's not a word I hear used much.
Had a friend who said TaFETTa, for the material. And I think I pronounced segue SegGew, rhyming with glue.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Oh-gul. I think. But it's not a word I hear used much.
Had a friend who said TaFETTa, for the material. And I think I pronounced segue SegGew, rhyming with glue.
Lay-pel for lapel was an embarassing moment. There are a number of words that I learned from reading that I'm still not sure I'm pronouncing correctly. Fortunately, they're too esoteric for my audience to know. I just try to say them with conviction.
When I was in college, we had a talk from a campus cop about being careful on campus -- one of those "If you go out at night alone you might be attacked or eaten by a vampire" talks. He kept saying, "Don't be mizzelled, young ladies, into thinking you're safe. Just don't be mizzelled." It took until the next day for my brain to translate that into "misled."
It took several months for me to wonder if maybe this word "meme" that looked exactly like that other word "meme"
Okay, so how is "meme" pronounced? Me-Me? meem? mem?
There are a number of words that I learned from reading that I'm still not sure I'm pronouncing correctly.
Yup. I can't remember specifics, but yup.
OreGANo. Whuh? And, well, why? Still a question: damask, DAM-isk or Duh-MAHSK or Duh-MASK? (Go DAM-isk, choose DAM-isk!)
I say DAM-isk. With conviction.
"misled" = meye-zzld
Jess P is me. I still see it that way when reading, though I can say it correctly.
I remember reading a book set in Australia and asking my mother what a "ewcallyPUCKtus" tree was. She didn't laugh... much.
ETA that I say dah-MASK.
My sister once asked what epi-scopal was. We were so confused until she showed us the word.
Still a question: damask, DAM-isk or Duh-MAHSK or Duh-MASK? (Go DAM-isk, choose DAM-isk!)
I say it like Damascus.
When I was very, very little, I thought babies were born with unbiblical cords. But that was a case of having heard the word but not read it rather than the other way around.
Meem, juliana.