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pedalinfaith has added 615 words, 19 lists, 53 comments, and 0 tags.

There is No 'X' in 'Espresso': Words Butchered by Americans

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I'm not talking about a Pennsylvanian drinking wooder or a Virginian crapping in an oothoos or even the plural form of "y'all" being "all y'all". (Hey, I love my Appalachian heritage.) I'm talking about adding letters that aren't even in the word or skipping ones that aren't silent (syncope and apocope). I mean, c'mon.

Your suggestions welcome. My editorializing is attached to the comments on each word.

If you like this list, also check out PBS's "Beastly Pronunciations" List and Kaichi's list of common tongue twister's.
Words 1 through 21 of 21

glacier   has been listed 24 times with 0 comments

vehement   has been listed 45 times with 0 comments

interesting   has been listed 33 times with 6 comments

facsimile   has been listed 30 times with 0 comments

porsche   has been listed 2 times with 1 comment

probably   has been listed 7 times with 0 comments

supposedly   has been listed 6 times with 0 comments

cement   has been listed 9 times with 0 comments

asphalt   has been listed 17 times with 0 comments

pronunciation   has been listed 10 times with 0 comments

jaguar   has been listed 14 times with 0 comments

asterisk   has been listed 22 times with 6 comments

walk   has been listed 21 times with 1 comment

february   has been listed 17 times with 4 comments

poinsettia   has been listed 11 times with 1 comment

mischievous   has been listed 16 times with 2 comments

wednesday   has been listed 24 times with 16 comments

ask   has been listed 17 times with 4 comments

nuclear   has been listed 22 times with 1 comment

species   has been listed 11 times with 2 comments

espresso   has been listed 31 times with 2 comments

Words 1 through 21 of 21
comments for this list
(add comments for specific words on the word pages themselves)
about 1 year ago wordwench said:

Mine: "Mechanize" as "Mek-ig-nize". You would not believe how many corporate suits insist on pronouncing it as if it contained a 'G'.

My mom says "Ext-ree" for Extra, but I think that's kinda cute.

Pffffft.

about 1 year ago Asativum said:

Wait, our kind host on this page says: "I'm talking about adding letters that aren't even in the word or skipping ones that aren't silent (syncope and apocope). I mean, c'mon."

But if you skip saying letters that aren't silent -- is this a koan?

about 1 year ago reesetee said:

Grew up in PA, ptero.

about 1 year ago pterodactyl said:

I'm American, too, and I always hear buoy pronounced to rhyme with phooey. Reesetee, I think you're right about regional variations, and I have to ask -- did you grow up in Pennsylvania, or are you a transplant?

about 1 year ago frogapplause said:

Yes, chained_bear... shudder, shudder, shudder. Egads! I better get back to my cartooning work. I'm losing it.

about 1 year ago reesetee said:

Jmp: I say "boy" for "buoy," and I'm American. I wonder whether that's a regional thing? Actually, I wonder whether many of these pronunciation differences are regional rather than national.

about 1 year ago bilby said:

My radio announcer was Australian. Conclusion: we mangle with the best of them. And all this on a day where a medical survey showed that Australians have surpassed Americans in levels of obesity.
Doctor interviewed on TV news: "If there was a Fat Olympics, we'd be favourites for the gold medal."

I'm sooooo proud *glowing*.

about 1 year ago Prolagus said:

I'm with you c_b! (but maybe this list is about Americans specifically).

about 1 year ago chained_bear said:

Can we just say that people mispronounce things all the time, and not make it something that's distinctively American?

P.S. frogapplause, did you mean "shudder," by any chance?

about 1 year ago frogapplause said:

Statistics pronounced as "stuh-sti-sticks" (said often by someone I knew who did NOT have a fluency disorder).

about 1 year ago frogapplause said:

I've heard "specific" pronounced as "pacific" (wince, shutter).

about 1 year ago bilby said:

That's it. I'm burning my Mickey Mouse ears.

about 1 year ago johnmperry said:

How about 'buoy'? We Brits rhyme it with boy, whereas Americans rhyme with phooey.

about 1 year ago bilby said:

I heard a radio announcer say escalate twice yesterday with a pronunciation that resembled eskewlate. Nasty.

over 2 years ago picklechipsluva5 said:

Oh yeah, and the misspelling two below. *Dictionary

over 2 years ago picklechipsluva5 said:

Sorry about the misspelling below. *Debateable

over 2 years ago picklechipsluva5 said:

Another word would be roof, although it is debateble. It is listed in the dicionary as both "rufe" and "roof (oo as in book)." Which do ya'lls (ha) use? I use roof, not rufe.

over 2 years ago chained_bear said:

I hate to say this, but it isn't that Americans butcher these words--it's that lots of people don't pronounce things right, regardless of where they live or grew up. I have a lot of these words on my own "GAH!"-type list. And I would imagine a lot of the people who are posting here and complaining about those who mispronounce things, are American themselves.

I'm not trying to argue or anything--just wanted to point that out. It makes me sad to witness discussions about British and American English that don't compare the two so much as complain that one of them is wrong. To use a phrase I hate (in keeping with the style of this page!), "it's all good." :)

over 2 years ago abiohphobia said:

awesome list

how bout caramel

over 2 years ago lorilori said:

How about escape? I can't stand when people say "excape."

over 2 years ago uselessness said:

Also, hover. It only has one "o," not two.

over 2 years ago uselessness said:

To billifer: I could never pronounce it like that. Sounds too much like "dur," which as we all know is a bastardization of "duh." Kinda defeats the purpose of an intellectual word like "dour." :-)

Another word for this list: associate. People insist on turning that "c" into an "sh."

over 2 years ago billifer said:

This was one that was recently featured on the KPBS show A Way With Words: dour. The correct pronunciation, which I didn't realize until hearing the show, is not (IPA) /daʊɹ/ ("sour") but actually /dʊɹ/ ("sure").

over 2 years ago colleen said:

there was that great bit on the Simpsons when Lisa flipped on Marge for insisting on saying "foilage" for "foliage."

over 2 years ago uselessness said:

Excellent link! There, too, I find myself busted for "salmon." Dang dang dang.

over 2 years ago pedalinfaith said:

That list is spun gold! I'm heretofore pimping it in the list description. And, of course, you've just created another hour or two of pleasure reading for me. Hooray for PBS.

over 2 years ago inkhorn said:

I've never been able to get my tongue around the word vehement, no matter how many times I hear it.

over 2 years ago inkhorn said:

I like this list. I even like the URL. Beastly.

over 2 years ago pedalinfaith said:

Or, what's even worse, the egregious 'inner-resting'.

over 2 years ago uselessness said:

interesting (intresting)?

over 2 years ago inkhorn said:

facsimile

Fak-sim-uh-lee, NOT fax-a-mile.

over 2 years ago angharad said:

Seanahan, what I love about jaguar is that there's the correct way, the American way, *and* the UK way (jag-yoo-er).

over 2 years ago seanahan said:

I pronounce both Porsche and Jaguar the "American" way, because people look at me so strangely when I say them correctly.

over 2 years ago uselessness said:

Okay, we're one-for-one. ;-)

over 2 years ago pedalinfaith said:

So, she sheepishly admits, I had to look it up and--gack--I've been pronouncing Porsche incorrectly all these years and thinking it was the "POR-sha" people who were being pretentious!

over 2 years ago uselessness said:

I'm never ordering fish for dinner again. And that color -- it's pinkish.

Oh, as long as we're on the car/road theme, how about Porsche?

Also, probably? ('probly')

over 2 years ago pedalinfaith said:

I could probably live with jagwire because I'm first generation Yankee and it makes up for all of the Southerners who pronounce "ire" words as "ahr" (for example, squire is pronounced squahr, which of course rhymes with square. :) I could probably go with sment too since it counteracts all of my relatives who pronounce it CEEment. :)

But ashfalt is unforgiveable. And that's definitely going on the list. In fact, maybe we need a list of the words with their mispronunciations spelled phoenetically (e.g., ashfalt, febbuary, reelator, and so on).

But, uselessness, I think you are the odd one out when it comes to salmon, though. Both the pronunciation guides for m-w and dictionary.com have the 'l' as silent.

This reminds me ... pronunciation is often mispronounced as pronounciation.

Thanks for the suggestions!

over 2 years ago uselessness said:

Words my dad can't pronounce, and I don't think he's alone:
jaguar -- he says "jagwire"
cement -- he says "sment"
asphalt -- he says "ashfalt"
salmon -- he says "sammin"

Not sure about the last one actually, maybe that's how it's really pronounced, but I try to include an "l" sound when I say it. Maybe I'm the weird one. :-)

over 2 years ago Asativum said:

I'll second asterisk, which I usually hear as Asterix. (No Obelix, though.)

over 2 years ago nkocharh said:

I would like to propose the addition of asterisk, which I often hear pronounced "asterik".

over 2 years ago seanahan said:

For the record, the spelling "Aluminum" predates the spelling "Aluminium". Therefore it is the British who are screwing up
butchering the language.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium#Spelling

over 2 years ago John said:

Great list. Though butchering language -- and some of these words -- is an international pastime. This page talks in particular about "ask" being mispronounced through the ages (google "ax"), and this amazon review claims that Chaucer wrote "ask" as "aks".

over 2 years ago agreatnotion said:

Great list. Don't forget how "aluminium" was reduced to "aluminum."

over 2 years ago pedalinfaith said:

Wonderful! Thanks, kad and angharad, for the additions and the pointer to Kaichi's list.

over 2 years ago kad said:

I often hear "supposably" instead of "supposedly." Then there's Oregon. How most of America can mispronounce the name of one of our own states is beyond me.

I love this list, by the way :)

over 2 years ago angharad said:

Some of my peeves: realtor, athlete, library, tsunami.
You might also take a look at
http://wordie.org/people/Kaichi?wl=173

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