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The "How is it pronounced" thread...

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jcgresham

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The response of an Oklahoman in Texas; a proper name can be mispronounced however I like!! :lol_hitti
 

WVBrady

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Freud (the saw company) is not German, so is not pronounced "froid." I remember seeing it in Fine Woodworking a long time ago. I believe it was "free-ood."

"One of my first surprises upon arriving in Italy was to learn that the company’s name “Freud” isn’t a family name like “Sigmund Freud.” Instead, the word is a contraction of “Fre” which is short for “fresa” (the Italian word for cutter), and “Ud,” the abbreviation of “Udine” (pronounced “OO-dee-nay”)

http://www.woodworkersjournal.com/E...-Italian-Carbide-Manufacturing-Plan-9154.aspx

http://www.forvo.com/word/fresa/#it
 
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justme-

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If you want to get picky - Huskvarna is actually pronounced Hoosk-varna. There was an article in Cycle world sometime back about pronunciation of foreign marques and Husky was cited as one of the most butchered by us Americans most especially thanks to the 70's crowd.

Last time I called someone at Freud (over 10 years ago) they answered (and gladly repeated) it as "Free-ood" just no delay between syllables so it sounded more like "frood" to the casual listener.
 

stikman56

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Prevost - Don't know about the air couplers I've seen with this name, but for the Prevost coaches it's pronounced "pray-vo"
 

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Joe B.

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PLOMB--

How do you say it?

Plum? or Pl-ah-mb (silent b)?

OR

I like tater tots?

Thank you PLOMB, for creating and using a logo that sort of looks like PLVMB, so that the world can constantly wonder why it is now called Proto, and come to Garage Journal for answers.

Mr. Plomb was French. You can find a translation online of how Plomb is pronounced in French. To me it sounds like "plume". However, Plomb at times used plum-bobs in their marketing & logos so that would sound lime the fruit.

There was a thread on this about a year ago I would guess.
 

steelespeed

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A disproportionate amount of native English speakers need help correctly pronouncing words in English before moving on to other languages.

Zing!
 

PCO6

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I remember reading an article on Hyundai cars back when they were starting to become popular. It said the correct pronunciation was ... June-day. I have never heard it actually pronounced that way.
 

jkwilson

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Veering a little out of the tool realm, Nikon has been mispronounced in the US for so long they've just given up. It is Nick-On, and is pronounced that way through most of the world. Their lens brand Nikkor is usually pronounced correctly due to the double "k".
 

gigamel

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The problem with ”Knipex” is the low quality of the consonant cluster ”kn” in the English language:

”knee”, ”knot” and ”knife”

is pronounced:

nee, not and nife

We dumped the "k" in the 17th century.
In german ”kn” is of high quality like the high quality consonant clusters ”kl” and ”kr” in English:
”cloud”, ”clue” and ”cluster”

”cry”, ”crust” and ”crow”

If we were asked to pronounce the "k" in ”kn” we would add an extra syllable and say:
”ka-nee”, ”ka-not” and ”ka-nife”
and that is where things go wrong - ”Knipex” is not ”nee-pex” or ”Ka-nee-pex” but ”Knee-pex” as in the Yiddish word ”knish” no vowels between k and n (Monte 0:25)
Simple eh? :)
 
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Sal Bandini

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Cool thread! How about...

Witte - "VIT - eh" ?
Gedore - "geh - DOOR - eh" ?
Heyco - "HAY - co" ?
NWS - "en vay ess" ?
Felo - "FEE - low" ?


It's a good thing there aren't any umlauts. :headscrat :)

You forgot Hazet.
 

gigamel

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Stahlwille is Stahl-vil-le (Monte 0:15)
Wiha is Vee-haa (”a” as in ”ha!ha!” or ”part” or ”heart,” not like ”a” in Canada) (Monte 0:35)
Wera is Ve-Raa (”e” like in Men) (Monte 0:29)
Hazet is Haa-Set (Monte 0:17)
 

gigamel

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Yes - you are right - I just figured "Set" was the closest. it should be Haa-Tset with the "ts" sounding like the "ts" part in the word "it's" (with out the "i") - but like you say that is way to hard for me, already having a hard time with the "kn" in Knipex :)
 

bcradio

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Ever wonder how to correctly pronounce certain tool names and brands? I know I have. I'll start.

How do you pronounce "Knipex"? Is it Nip-ex, Nye-pex, Kun-ip-ex, Kin-ip-ex, Kun-uh-pex, Kin-uh-pex, or something else?

I know that in German, "Walther" (the gun) is pronounced "Vul-tour" - rhymes with cool-purr. "Sig Sauer" (also the gun) is pronounced "tZig tZow-uh" - rhymrs with "pig-pow-uh". I learned both pronunciations from a native German who liked guns and target shooting. Not surprisingly, he told me that English speakers mispronounce many German brand names.

tour and purr do not rhyme.
 
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BirdMobile

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tour and purr do not rhyme.

They do in this part of the country! :)

Here, you get a great "dill" when you buy something on sale.
You praise the "lard".
You take a "turr" of the "turrist" attraction. (Source of "yer" post)
It's not "alright", it's "aight".
You go out "fur" a pack of smokes.
You buy an ear of "carn" at the "carner" market.

Southwest U.S. "English" at its finest! :)
 
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cheechi

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I remember reading an article on Hyundai cars back when they were starting to become popular. It said the correct pronunciation was ... June-day. I have never heard it actually pronounced that way.

Have you ever heard it pronounced by a Korean? The Brits pronounce it Hy-un-dai which is the least bad can sound in English. it would be more like june-dye if you were to try it, but really hyoon-dye is about as correct as you can get without knowing Korean.

On a related note, Prius is mispronounced by everyone
 

R6 Racer

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One that gets me is aluminum
Pronounced... a lu min um
Not... alu mini um

I don't know which one is right with "pergola"
is it 2 sylabils with the emphasis first as in ... per' gula
Or 3 sylabils & emphasis on the middle... per go' la

I think the last way but i'm not sure.

Steve
 

brass89

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Lisle? I've always said 'lye-ell' like someone's name "lyle" (lyle lovett?)
 

WVBrady

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One that gets me is aluminum
Pronounced... a lu min um
Not... alu mini um...

The second way is correct in England and parts of Canada. Note that it is spelled with an extra 'i' for that pronunciation. (Also note that the word pronunciation loses the 'o' to throw off foreigners.) :lol:
 

WVBrady

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Martin Senour

The local paint places all call it "Martin Senior", but I heard it in an ad pronounced like "seen-our".
 

JR 42

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One that gets me is aluminum
Pronounced... a lu min um
Not... alu mini um

It's both! Most of the world spells it "aluminium," so they're pronouncing it correctly. The US and Canada use "aluminum," for reasons I don't remember. I'm pretty sure both are accepted pronunciations to chemists.

From Wikipedia:

"Etymology
Two variants of the metal's name are in current use, aluminium (pronunciation: /ˌæl(j)ʊˈmɪniːəm/) and aluminum (/əˈluːmɪnəm/)—besides the obsolete alumium. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) adopted aluminium as the standard international name for the element in 1990 but, three years later, recognized aluminum as an acceptable variant. Hence their periodic table includes both.[61] IUPAC internal publications use either spelling in nearly the same number.[62]

Most countries use the spelling aluminium. In the United States and Canada, the spelling aluminum predominates.[16][63] The Canadian Oxford Dictionary prefers aluminum, whereas the Australian Macquarie Dictionary prefers aluminium. In 1926, the American Chemical Society officially decided to use aluminum in its publications; American dictionaries typically label the spelling aluminium as "chiefly British".[64][65]

(history stuff deleted...)

The -ium suffix conformed to the precedent set in other newly discovered elements of the time: potassium, sodium, magnesium, calcium, and strontium (all of which Davy isolated himself). Nevertheless, -um spellings for elements were not unknown at the time, as for example platinum, known to Europeans since the 16th century, molybdenum, discovered in 1778, and tantalum, discovered in 1802. The -um suffix is consistent with the universal spelling alumina for the oxide (as opposed to aluminia), as lanthana is the oxide of lanthanum, and magnesia, ceria, and thoria are the oxides of magnesium, cerium, and thorium respectively.

The aluminum spelling is used in the Webster's Dictionary of 1828. In his advertising handbill for his new electrolytic method of producing the metal in 1892, Charles Martin Hall used the -um spelling, despite his constant use of the -ium spelling in all the patents[58] he filed between 1886 and 1903. It has consequently been suggested[by whom?] that the spelling reflects an easier-to-pronounce word with one fewer syllable, or that the spelling on the flyer was a mistake.[citation needed] Hall's ********** of production of the metal ensured that aluminum became the standard English spelling in North America."

I trimmed a bit and added some bolding. The full link is here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium#Etymology

At least no one uses alumium any more...

JR
 
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gigamel

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hus-qua-var-na is how us old motocrossers said it back in the 60's and 70's!

Husqvarna is Hoos-kvar-na with the ”kv” sounding kind of like the ”kw” in ”quake” except it is ”kv” instead of ”kw” :)
 
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cheechi

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well that's also true, and by that token the correct pronunciation of 928 is 'start already ******** you'
 
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