We're in love. We're ... lovers. We're lesbian, gay-type lovers.

Willow ,'Potential'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

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."


msbelle - Mar 18, 2004 10:17:45 am PST #1525 of 10002
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

My grandmother who was raised in Misourri, pronounces it Mi-zur-uh. I pronounce is differently depending on where I am.

The joys of growing up in Texas but not with Texan parents and then moving to NYC is the tendancy to mark my speech by whom I am around. Recently I have been encourgaed by a few people to redevelop the Texan qualities of my speech.


Micole - Mar 18, 2004 11:23:30 am PST #1526 of 10002
I've been working on a song about the difference between analogy and metaphor.

Mary is a long A, marry is a short A, and merry is a short E. (New Yorker.) I was also startled to find out from an author's note that one of my friends pronounced Carrie to rhyme with "hairy."

The mispronounced words discussion has confused me so thoroughly that I am now convinced I have never pronounced a single word of English correctly. (This casts some doubt on the Mary/marry/merry discussion above.) I now feel too self-conscious to speak, and plan to spend the rest of my life passing notes or writing on a small whiteboard I will hang around my neck, a la Willow and Buffy in "Hush," since at least I know how to spell.


Micole - Mar 18, 2004 11:23:35 am PST #1527 of 10002
I've been working on a song about the difference between analogy and metaphor.

Micole - Mar 18, 2004 11:23:44 am PST #1528 of 10002
I've been working on a song about the difference between analogy and metaphor.

P.M. Marc - Mar 18, 2004 11:36:28 am PST #1529 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

I was also startled to find out from an author's note that one of my friends pronounced Carrie to rhyme with "hairy."

::blink::

there's another way to say it?


Alicia K - Mar 18, 2004 11:39:46 am PST #1530 of 10002
Uncertainty could be our guiding light.

Fred Pete! Mukwonago! Sorry. So another fellow Wisconsinite and got excited. And you can't forget Oconomowoc.

My hometown is Wausau, and it got a mention in the Liberace TV bio-movie some years back. They mispronounced it to sound like "Warsaw." It's WAH-sah.

Fred Pete, did you say RAY-seen or ruh-SEEN for the city of Racine? I grew up saying it ruh-SEEN and it always threw me when I heard other Wisconsin folks saying it the other way.


deborah grabien - Mar 18, 2004 11:40:55 am PST #1531 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

I've always pronounced Carrie the way I would if it began with a lower case c and ended in a y. Carry. Carrie.


P.M. Marc - Mar 18, 2004 11:42:16 am PST #1532 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

I've always pronounced Carrie the way I would if it began with a lower case c and ended in a y. Carry. Carrie.

Which rhymes with hairy, drat it.


Alicia K - Mar 18, 2004 11:58:01 am PST #1533 of 10002
Uncertainty could be our guiding light.

I guess it could be pronounced to rhyme with "starry," but then it's usually spelled Kari.


JohnSweden - Mar 18, 2004 11:59:46 am PST #1534 of 10002
I can't even.

John, that reading sounds like it was great. I have The Envy.

Thanks, Plei. I wasn't shooting for Envy, but I'll take it. t greedy

I did a writeup for the Kay site, brightweavings.com, because people in other cities on GGK's tour have posted and I enjoyed their stuff, so I thought I'd return the favour. I figured Literary was a good place for it here. Sadly, I had to post in the middle of the great misplaced pronunciation skirmish, but them's as interested will see it on the way by.

ObOnT: I also sometimes hear carrie/carry with a flatter A, like car-ry. Viz: Kansas, Carry On Our Wayward Son. Scots tend to pronounce words like that more ah than eh, like my first name.