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I think soDid the Queen Mother not make exactly this error when naming “Royal Anglian Regiment”….?
I think soDid the Queen Mother not make exactly this error when naming “Royal Anglian Regiment”….?
My point is I've never heard Milngavie or Wrotham pronounced at all on any channel - precisely like Slaithwaite!I've never heard Milngavie or Wrotham wrongly pronounced on BBC TV or radio national news, and living in the south-east, never heard Slaithwaite in the news anywhere.
I remember hearing Milngavie mentioned many years ago a few months after I was told how the locals pronounced it, thereby confirming that the BBC Pronunciation unit had it covered. Wrotham is mentioned from time to time because it is the location of the main FM transmitter site for London and the Home Counties.My point is I've never heard Milngavie or Wrotham pronounced at all on any channel - precisely like Slaithwaite!
Ah, so if you are lazy and drop the H you finish up in Derbyshire at Oftun (Alfreton) instead.I've heard Hoveton and Wroxham station mispronounced on a BBC railway programme with Portillo! It's HOFF-TUN, not HOVE-UH-TUN
I heard Euxton Balshaw Lane pronounced as ‘Youke-stun’ earlier today at Preston by the auto announcements. That’s a bit embarrassing seeing as how close it is!The announcements at Preston mention "Gar-forth" and yet also say "East Garf'th".
Or it might be the other way round.
Romford always used to be 'Rumfd' and Barking didn't have a final 'g'.Many years ago an announcer at Romford couldn't cope with Prittlewell and came up with Pretty-well.
Of course since the war so many incomers have mispronounced Chesham as Chesh-am that it is now the accepted pronunciation. Correctly it was Chess-am or Chezz-um.
Its Hol - born which drives me bonkers. Even from station staff who work there. There used to an advert on the buses ( and perhaps tubes) in the 60's which laughed at people who didn't say 'Hoh-bn' with no 'l' and a 'schwa' in the second syllable.On my journeys to and around London I’ve fallen foul to a number of mispronunciations.
Holborn - ‘Hohbun’
Bermondsey - ‘zee’ rather than ‘Ber-mond-sey’
Marylebone - Marry le bone’
Bees ‘o the barn I’d have no idea how to pronounce.
'Ee-lye' would be roughly correct if you were from East Sussex.Ely often gets mispronounced as 'Ee-lye' by those not from the area.
Wymondham is also a classic example.
Los Angeles’ “American” pronunciation is intentionally bastardised.That's not necessarily wrong per se, just not American. After all the "standard" UK pronunciations of Los Angeles, New Orleans and St Louis are all "wrong" to American ears.
There is a street in Studley, Wark called the Slough. Pronounced Sluff. Railway interest. It had Studley Railway station and Alleleys heavy transport depot is also there.Years ago, when some South Wales services called at Slough, I heard it announced as Sluff!
It's not always dialect: although it doesn't have a station, Bosham just west of Chichester is pronounced 'bozzum' whereas Cosham, north of Portsmouth and a mere 14km west of Bosham, is pronounced 'coshum'.My whole life has been a learning curveI got most of the less obvious pronunciations wrong at some point in my life, even the likes of Worcester and Salisbury as a young 7 or 8 year old. Some of the lesser known places I only got right once I visited the area. (Heighington, Grosmont, Sleights, Keighley and, only last month, Wymondham and Ely). My most embarrassing mispronunciation as a child though was probably 'quay' which I pounced in a similar way to a certain small, game bird.
But I suspect many are confusing mispronunciation with accent/dialect ? For example Prudhoe. I live near the village of Coxhoe and pronounce that as Coxer. If I was a geotdie, it would certainly be Coxah and if I was a typical Durham Uni student (stereotyping), it would be pronounced Cox hoe darling. All perfectly legit in my opinion....
Now for Shrewsbury...
It's not always dialect: although it doesn't have a station, Bosham just west of Chichester is pronounced 'bozzum' whereas Cosham, north of Portsmouth and a mere 14km west of Bosham, is pronounced 'coshum'.
Then there two Southwicks along the south coast: 'suthick' near Fareham and 'south wick' with a station between Portslade and Shoreham in West Sussex.
There's no consistency when it comes to errant Ws in South Yorkshire: you've got Addick, Cudduth and Dodduth, but Wombwell isn't pronounced "Womble"!Also, Adwick-Le-Street - "Add Wick" or "Addick", I'm just up the road and hear both versions used
Yep, I've lived withon a couple of miles of Adwick for 60 years. Both are in common usage, it seems to be whichever one fits the flow of the conversation. It's not split between groups of people, everyone pretty much uses bothSorry if it's been mentioned and I've missed it, but: Wemyss Bay
Also, Adwick-Le-Street - "Add Wick" or "Addick", I'm just up the road and hear both versions used
In other words, it depends whether they have their teeth in or not.Yep, I've lived withon a couple of miles of Adwick for 60 years. Both are in common usage, it seems to be whichever one fits the flow of the conversation. It's not split between groups of people, everyone pretty much uses both
Los Angeles’ “American” pronunciation is intentionally bastardised.
It’s a Spanish name, pronounced “Loce Ang-hell-ace”. The local authority had tk literally pass a ruling in the 50s to ruin the pronunciation to “Loss Anjeless”.
It's always been Grinnidge, along with Woollidge, just up the road. Does anyone know how Greenwich Village is pronounced in New York?Greenwich in London, which isn't pronounced GREEN-WITCH!
"The Village" apparently!Does anyone know how Greenwich Village is pronounced in New York?
I think you'll find it does....unless it has closed since I used to work the West Coastway line back in the 'eighties!although it doesn't have a station, Bosham just west of Chichester is pronounced 'bozzum' w
Similarly Theydon Bois, according to Jago Hazzard, is pronounced Boys or maybe Boyce (is that where he retired to?)Following from @hexagon789's "...the 'standard' UK pronunciations of Los Angeles, New Orleans and St. Louis are all 'wrong' to American ears.":
A U.S. city name which long caused me to boggle, potential-pronunciations-wise: is the rather less-heard-of Des Moines, capital of Iowa (probably best known nowadays, for being the birthplace of Bill Bryson). One learns that it is pronounced in its own land, as "duh MOYN" (accent on second word). Literal translation of the name always gives me a bit of a smile -- "some monks".
Similarly Theydon Bois, according to Jago Hazzard, is pronounced Boys or maybe Boyce (is that where he retired to?)
Sorry my mistake, - my mind was on the pleasures and pitfalls(sic) of Bosham Harbour.I think you'll find it does....unless it has closed since I used to work the West Coastway line back in the 'eighties!
Funnily enough the very reason you outline is precisely why I have heard of Des Moines and why I looked up its pronunciationFollowing from @hexagon789's "...the 'standard' UK pronunciations of Los Angeles, New Orleans and St. Louis are all 'wrong' to American ears.":
A U.S. city name which long caused me to boggle, potential-pronunciations-wise: is the rather less-heard-of Des Moines, capital of Iowa (probably best known nowadays, for being the birthplace of Bill Bryson). One learns that it is pronounced in its own land, as "duh MOYN" (accent on second word). Literal translation of the name always gives me a bit of a smile -- "some monks".
I understood its one of the few places ti have the same pronunciation in BrE and AmE - Gren-itch/Gren-idge both being valid in both countries. Though Greenwich, Massachusetts is pronounced Grin-witch...It's always been Grinnidge, along with Woollidge, just up the road. Does anyone know how Greenwich Village is pronounced in New York?