Drago
Legendary Member
- Location
- Suburban Poshshire
The Queen pronounces scone with the 'e', and thats good enoigh for me,
The Queen pronounces scone with the 'e', and thats good enoigh for me,
...a friend at Leicester Uni called it Lowbrow.Down here in Poshshire we have such issues too... I always wonder about the truth of the much-stated mis-pronunciation of Loughborough - I was at university there for three years and never once heard any loogbaroogas, lowburrows or luffbruffs.
The BBC pronounce Belfast as Bel-fast. I've never heard the locals do that.
Have even more fun calling it the nēnē ; I love the noise it makes.A long-standing topic of great debate in our household. My partner, from Northamptonshire says Nen. Her friend from Cambridgeshire says Neen, as Drago detailed. To mock them both, I (a northerner) call it the Nee Nee.
I think though, it just allowed them to set their differences aside and both mock me instead.
...a friend at Leicester Uni called it Lowbrow.
A few years ago i missed an absolute beauty of an opportunity to take a memorable photo of that church.I live near the Nene in Cambridgeshire and everyone round here pronounces it Neen.
Whichever way you pronounce it, the Nene is a truly beautiful river.
View attachment 548866
To be fair, Fotheringhay Church shown above is just inside Northamptonshire- so is Probably on the banks of the Nen.
Glottal stopHow do you tell when somebody is pronouncing a hyphen ?
Oh, I must have missed that! That tale never fails to make me chuckle.Funnily enough, that came up HERE about a month ago!
How do you tell when somebody is pronouncing a hyphen ?
The BBC pronounce Belfast as Bel-fast. I've never heard the locals do that.
In this case there the BBC make a slight pause between the 'Bel' and the 'fast', as though they were two separate words.How do you tell when somebody is pronouncing a hyphen ?