Bryan wrote:Zaarin wrote:hwhatting wrote:jal wrote:In Dutch we write "Dzjengis", and I've ported that pronunciation over to English. Never occured to me it's pronounced with an initial [g].
Don't worry, [d_Z] is the "dictionary" pronunciation and absolutely correct, it's just that many people don't seem to know that and pronounce it with [g].
Merriam-Webster, which I assume reflects American usage, has [d_Z] as the main pronuciation and [g] as a variant.
Really? I have never heard an American pronounce Genghis with /ʤ/. I'm always torn: /ʤ/ is closer to correct but risks sounding uneducated in English.
I'd say the opposite. Whenever I hear /ʤ/ it sets my teeth on edge. Why? Specifically because it sounds like someone trying to sound educated. It's not the pronunciation that winds me up, it's the values I perceive the person using it to hold, rightly or wrongly!
I have no problem sounding just slightly pretentious. My issue is with people who try to sound educated but at the same time make it extremely obvious that they know precious little about the subject they're posturing to be knowledgeable about. I had a literature professor in college who was such an unbearably arrogant snob, but at the same time if you'd ever actually read the stories we were discussing it was obvious that he was
waaaay out of his league (and I later found out he was a film major, so...). After taking one class with him I avoided him like the plague, but one of my classmates found that all of his lectures were drawn from Spark Notes.
alynnidalar wrote:Bryan wrote:I work with someone who always says /ʤ/enghis, guiotine (guillotine), paeya (paella), and Budapesht.
People pronounce "guillotine" with an /l/? Huh.
Yes, and it makes me weep every time I hear it.
Travis B. wrote:(I did not know anyone pronounced Budapest with an /ʃ/ in English.)
I live in an area with a pretty sizable Eastern European (including Hungarian) community, so I'm far more used to hearing it with /ʃ/ than /s/.
linguoboy wrote:There are also toponyms with /l/ for <ll>, at least in their traditional local forms. (For instance, not only is "Pinellas" in the names Pinellas Park and Pinellas County in Florida pronounced with /l/, the vowel in the initial syllable is /ai/, not /iː/. I would guess it's the same with Costilla County and River in Colorado.)
Floridian here: I've always heard "Pinellas" with /ɪ/, not /ai/: /pʰɪˈnɛləs/.