I think you'll find it's pronounced "Kirk-cawdy" - it's simply a silent 'l', as found in many words throughout the English language.Well, given that the Scots manage to get Kirkuddy out of Kirkaldy...
I think you'll find it's pronounced "Kirk-cawdy" - it's simply a silent 'l', as found in many words throughout the English language.Well, given that the Scots manage to get Kirkuddy out of Kirkaldy...
I thought it was "Kir Coddy" without spelling the k in Kirk.
And of course, like many placenames in Scotland, it isn't English anyway...
(but I bet I just havent looked hard enough!)
local pronounciation of 'Amersham' should give the clue as to which is authentic. I don't know.
I had always thought both Amersham and Chesham had distinct "shum" sounds. This comes from someone who is very used to Metropolitan line announcements.
Ammer-sham; Ches-shum
The classic non-railway example is Gotham City (the city of love) as in Batman, pronounced Goth-um, compared with Gotham, a village near Nottingham, pronounced Gottum.
I presume you mean pronouncing the first part as Goat? So Goat-um![]()
No idea where the goats came from!
Some Welsh ones: Hawarden is "HOR-den", Cathays is "ca-TAYZ", Bynea is "BIN-ya" (the Welsh Bynie is "BUN-yeh" as expected).
Wales doesn't have very many, because the Welsh language itself has no such thing as unphonetic spellings; everything is written exactly as it's pronounced. Actually the majority of languages are like that :P
Perhaps this is a slight drift, but in 1965 when the newly formed London Borough decided to spell Harringay as Haringey, why did British Rail not go along with the change?
Kirkcaldy's pronunciation depends on the accent of the person saying it! Kir or Ker; cuddy, coddy or cawdy: have heard them all said by Scots.
And of course, like many placenames in Scotland, it isn't English anyway - it is generally thought to come from the Pictish language, though I have seen a case made for it being derived from old Welsh.
No
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RKHiz02RVA
Unless you really like R Kelly dirging, listen to the pronunciation at 1:08 and 1:55 from Batman. It is Goth (as in black eye-shadowed teenagers) -um.
The village near Nottingham is Got (as in 'have you got that CD I asked you for?) -um
The 'um' everybody keeps quoting, including me, is actually a 'schwa', represented by a backward 'e' in phonetic alphabets and is like the sound in
level and banana.
No idea where the goats came from!
I've only ever heard Gotham pronounced with a long 'o'. (As in the wise men thereof.) And I'd suggest that MCR247 is probably right, being as he lives within five miles of the village!
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EDIT I asked the internet and it returned a near-unanimous support for the long-o pronunciation. In fact the only source advocating a short o that Google throws up is post number 339 of this very thread.
Perhaps this is a slight drift, but in 1965 when the newly formed London Borough decided to spell Harringay as Haringey, why did British Rail not go along with the change?
The place Harringay is just one (very) small area in the borough of Haringey. In fact the word Harringay has had many spelling variants over the years and shares a common root with Hornsey.Some folk (within the borough even) pronounce it as Harrin Jee to differentiate the borough or council from the district of Harringay which is still there and is still Harringay.
The place Harringay is just one (very) small area in the borough of Haringey. In fact the word Harringay has had many spelling variants over the years and shares a common root with Hornsey.
When I was very young, some people pronounced the local authority name as 'Harringee' (Gee as in Glee, but without the l) to distinguish it from the place - but I've not heard that since the 1970s. I've never heard anyone pronounce either name as 'Harrin Jee'.
If it reopens, I can imagine Abertillery tripping a few people up. (Hint: Welsh placenames are categorically never stressed further back than the penultimate syllable.)
[checks various websites]
Oh, heh, there goes my life-long assumption
I think
(A Bertie Leary, not Aber Till Airy ? )
[checks various websites]
Not strictly on topic, but certainly associated, there is always Bombardier.