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Poll on how to prounce PLOMB

How to pronounce PLOMB

  • sounds like bomb

    Votes: 90 45.9%
  • sounds like plum

    Votes: 93 47.4%
  • other be sure to post your version

    Votes: 13 6.6%

  • Total voters
    196
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Joe B.

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Jan 2, 2007
Messages
2,752
According the the 1940 Census, Alphonse M Plomb was 69 years old and a toolmaker living in Pomona, CA. He was born in France in 1871. In the week of March 24, 1940 he had only worked 16 hours so I suspect he was partially retired.
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K9W2-XV8
(You can click and see the actual Census record from this link.)

Per other site on the web, parted ways with Plomb tools around 1917 but continued to make some tools under the name A. Plomb.

Alphonse Plomb is a French name so the French pronunciation would most accurately represent how it was pronounced within the company and would be the correct pronunciation. However, it is likely that the name was widely mispronounced as it was foreign and recorded communications would not have been available for something trivial like a tool brand. Also, considering Mr. Plomb had already left the company when it really started to grow, everyone else there could have anglicized the name.

Interestingly enough Plomb in the french word for the metal lead but can also be used for shot and sinkers like in the USA.

There are a number of places on the web that will allow you to here the French precipitation and I listed a few below. I would best describe the pronunciation at "plohm" with much less emphasis on the 'p' than we would use in the USA.

http://translate.google.com/transla...a=X&ei=8SuUULb8LeTU2AX7qYDoAg&ved=0CB8QrgYwAA

http://www.forvo.com/word/plomb/
 

Mickey O

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Joined
Oct 25, 2009
Messages
6,153
Location
Chicago, IL
I just realized I misspelled the F@#%^ng title. How can I fix that??

I was going ask you to start a poll on what the correct spelling of pronounce is.


plomb2.jpg
 

ddawg16

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Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
21,005
Location
S. California
You would not believe some of the conversations my wife and I have about pronouciation.....she is always giving me **** about my Texas version of words.....like pronoucing "greasy" as "greezy".....she says there is "NO Z in greasy"....I tell her that it's perfectly valid Tex speak....

But then I give her **** about how Brits pronouce words....they put R's in words that don't have them...for example, most Brits pronounce America as "Ameriker" or "I have an idear" (instead of idea)
 

lwlobo

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Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Messages
1,076
Location
Colorado Springs, CO
There is a pronunciation on wikipedia dictionary but it is unsupported by MAC so I can't hear it DOH.

http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/plomb

That sounds like plume, rhymes with tomb, in a faint, understated, limp-wristed french kindof way. Can't be the name of an solid historical american tool company.

Rhymes with bomb is how I say it, but I only know of Plomb from the internet and garage sales.
 

Joe B.

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Joined
Jan 2, 2007
Messages
2,752
That sounds like plume, rhymes with tomb, in a faint, understated, limp-wristed french kindof way. Can't be the name of an solid historical american tool company.

Well, Mr. Plomb was a Frenchman that came to the USA so I guess a solid historical american tool company was named for a understated Frenchman.

:lol_hitti

In all seriousness, the tomb / plume pronunciation seems about right.
 

KF5LCH

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Joined
Nov 10, 2011
Messages
216
Location
S.E. Oklahoma
I remember phonics from 1st grade. It's a "short O" . So it's pronounced "aw".

Plomb= Pl-aw-mb.
Bomb= B-aw-mb.

Grandpa always pronounced it with a silent B. So that's how I do it. :thumbup:
 
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fatfillup

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Jan 17, 2009
Messages
10,337
Location
Finksburg, Md
I voted plum but after reading the arguments, I'm thinking plume would be how the man's name is pronouced and we would have Americanized it to rhyme with bomb but I'm sticking with plum.

Now you all realize that since many of us have typed in bomb, we are being watched
 

PowderKeg

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Joined
May 20, 2008
Messages
961
Location
Little Rock, AR
Ditto rhymes with bomb - 'course you're seeing this from someone that pronounces "Baltimore, Maryland" as "Bawmer, Merlnd", and carries a few bottles of wutr with him when marking timber...
 

B_Bimmer

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Joined
May 7, 2015
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1,871
Location
Eastern Iowa
I agree that there would probably not have been trademark issues if it was said differently, but I rhyme it with bomb because that makes it easier to differentiate between brands in everyday conversion.
 

JeepYJ

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Joined
Dec 25, 2015
Messages
9,106
Plomb is pronounced like “tomb” which is different than ”plum” or bomb”. More like “plume”
 

JeepYJ

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Joined
Dec 25, 2015
Messages
9,106
I remember phonics from 1st grade. It's a "short O" . So it's pronounced "aw".

Plomb= Pl-aw-mb.
Bomb= B-aw-mb.

Grandpa always pronounced it with a silent B. So that's how I do it. :thumbup:
Tomb is not pronounced t-aw-mb
 

david3921

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 22, 2014
Messages
443
Location
Wyoming, Michigan
Plume according to Wikipedia. However, comb and plomb are similarly spelled so could it be plome with a long 'O'?

BTW, comb is part of my last name and we do not pronounce the 'B'.
 

rockinacummins

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Joined
Oct 27, 2013
Messages
1,707
Location
Wapanucka, OK
I found a PLOMB wrench in the $1 bin at a pawn shop one time. Took it to the counter where the guy looked it over real good and told me it was a “Plum-Bob” wrench. He then proceeded to tell me it was made by Snap-On.

So it’s obviously it’s pronounced Snap-On-Plum-Bob.
 
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