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Re: Grammer.
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 10:19 pm
by Sub
Hi,
Love this topic, in the US my US relatives
Nissan car is pronounced NEEsan, and the country Iraq pronounced EYEraq.
So my question is why dont they pronounce it EERAQ ?.
Regards to all
Re: Grammer.
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 10:28 pm
by Max-U52
Re: Grammer.
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 10:35 pm
by HERMAN BIX
The browser spell check may be in Ameri/glish but thank our lucky stars that a Cockney didn’t invent the thing!!

Re: Grammer.
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 10:39 pm
by Sub
Re: Grammer.
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 11:00 pm
by Estnische
I'm still trying to find some of that sodder so I can finally fix my tank wiring...
Re: Grammer.
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2020 11:13 pm
by 43rdRecceReg
The rebellious spellings are something we can get accustomed to

; but, as I become ever grumpier with age, I find the relatively recent import of 'Valley Girl' speak into British schools, and elsewhere to be entirely exasperating. This 'Uptalking' trend drives me nuts!!! The rising terminal-or 'Uptalk'/'Upspeak'- where all statements begin to sound like questions; where intonation goes up at the end of every phrase, and where all of this is joined together by the extreme misuse and overuse of 'like'

) makes me want to reply with knuckles

Uptalkers sound vacuous, weak, uncertain- and, er punchable!
As if this emerging trend isn't murdering spoken English enough, a new and hideous twist is 'Valley Speak' being delivered with 'Vocal Fry' (AKA 'Creaky Voice'), where speakers begin to sound like
Geiger counters.
Here's an example:
If you watch any Movies, TV shows, Documentaries, etc., made before the 1990s in the US and UK, you would have heard normal, age-old speech patterns. Sadly, in the last 10-20 years, it appears that
Roy Thinnes' 'Invaders', or Ray Bradbury's 'Bodysnatchers' have taken people over, and replaced them with Uptalking, Geiger-voiced aliens...

Re: Grammer.
Posted: Wed Jun 10, 2020 11:49 am
by Carrion
done worry in the shires we still speak funny at least when tourists are around and pretend to like weird wood to freak out those from not round ere.
Re: Grammer.
Posted: Wed Jun 10, 2020 12:25 pm
by jarndice
Real Estate

Ohh you mean Estate Agents
And if there was a poll held in the USA how many would pronounce Vase as Varze or as VaaaZe, indeed the film "You'Ve got mail has one of the protagonists saying it one way them immediately saying it the other way so our TransAtlantic friends don't appear to have much confidence in the Anglophobe Mr Websters interpretation of the Queens English

Re: Grammer.
Posted: Wed Jun 10, 2020 12:40 pm
by Carrion
when i was buying my place it was amazing the linguistic lengths the agents would do to get around a very basic set of instructions.
1) bungalow.
2) flat access to it.
3) A drive AND garage
4) Nothing listed (historical preservation orders for the unfamiliar)
So i get offered a property the Eiger would call a bit steep to get to, with no parking or garage that had 3 stories and was a grade 1 list IN a flood zone
Re: Grammer.
Posted: Wed Jun 10, 2020 1:37 pm
by Max-U52
Yeah, I've learned a little bit about listed properties and there's no way you would get me to buy something like that. We have kind of the same thing over here in different cities that have historical societies that want to dictate everything right down to the color you can paint your house. I would never buy something like that. It's my house I'll do what I want to with it and if somebody's going to give me static about it they can just keep it.
And just for the record, I'm glad that Shaun started this thread because I was thinking of starting something similar, except I was going to call it, "Learning to speak English".
