| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 483.1 | I got tired after the first few. (-: | ZFC::DERAMO | Your wish is my .com | Thu Feb 25 1988 23:47 | 28 | 
|  |     Can we make "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" silent?
    
    A from flea
    B from dumb
    C from scene
    D from bridge
    E from note
    F from RTFM
    G from gnu
    H from henry higgins
    I from weird
    J from
    K from know
    L from
    M from
    N from damn
    O from
    P from pneumonia
    Q from
    R from
    S from
    T from
    U from
    V from
    W from jaw
    X from
    Y from
    Z from jazz [the second one (-:]
 | 
| 483.2 | Couple more | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading UK | Fri Feb 26 1988 10:58 | 8 | 
|  |     M from mnemonic	(if you pronounce it carelessly :-) )
    O from Oedipus
    R from car		(if you're from Boston or Reading)
    
    Pedantically, your examples for E and I don't count as they modify
    the previous vowel sound.
    
    Jeff.
 | 
| 483.3 | S as in Yes ... | CALIFE::PETERS | E Unibus Plurum | Fri Feb 26 1988 11:57 | 7 | 
|  | 	J from Jugoslavia
	L from Calm
	O from Potatoe (P'tatoe)
	Q from Dos Equuis
	T from Stretch
	
	Steve
 | 
| 483.4 | u | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Tea in the Sahara with you... | Fri Feb 26 1988 16:42 | 4 | 
|  |     U from plague
    
    -jody
    
 | 
| 483.5 | X from Don Quixote | CLARID::PETERS | E Unibus Plurum | Fri Feb 26 1988 16:51 | 0 | 
| 483.6 |  | ERIS::CALLAS | I've lost my faith in nihilism. | Fri Feb 26 1988 20:49 | 1 | 
|  |     E from Euclid.
 | 
| 483.7 | what about my "F" example? | ZFC::DERAMO | I'd rather be orbiting. | Fri Feb 26 1988 23:49 | 11 | 
|  |     Re .2:
    
>>    Pedantically, your examples for E and I don't count as they modify
>>    the previous vowel sound.
    
    I was just testing to see if you all were awake!
    
    For some reason it's harder to slip those things by in this
    conference! (-:
    
    Dan
 | 
| 483.8 | nit | DELNI::CANTOR | Dave C. | Sun Feb 28 1988 06:45 | 7 | 
|  |       Re .3
      
      >    O from Potatoe (P'tatoe)
      Do you mean O from Potato (Puhtay'tuh)?
      
      Dave C.
 | 
| 483.9 | but my dictionary says no | ZFC::DERAMO | I'd rather be orbiting. | Sun Feb 28 1988 16:55 | 1 | 
|  |     O in opossum?
 | 
| 483.10 | (AN UNFORTUNATE CASE OF A DROPPED 'D' - Derek!) | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Progress:=!(going_backwards>coping) | Mon Feb 29 1988 02:07 | 18 | 
|  |     Ah er G'day, 
    
    on a more lighter level, What does 'potoooooooo' spell?
    
    potatoes - pot-8-'o's  
    
    Sorry
    
    How about
    F U NE M ?
    F U NE X ?
    S EV M
    S EV X
    R N, M N X !
    
    EREK
        
    
 | 
| 483.11 | Alphabet soup | CLARID::PETERS | E Unibus Plurum | Mon Feb 29 1988 08:53 | 26 | 
|  | >    How about
>    F U NE M ?
>    F U NE X ?
>    S EV M
>    S EV X
>    R N, M N X !
When I heard it, it went:
	F U N E M ?
	S V F M
	F U N E X ?
	S V F X .
	N R F M N X .
	R! V F N 10 E X .
	O, Y?
	I F E 10 M
        
    	Steve
Meanwhile, back at the subject of this topic, I looks like I got away with most
of the examples such as Q and X (which I thought were cheating) - at least
someone challenged O! 
 | 
| 483.12 |  | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | $50 never killed anybody | Sat Mar 05 1988 14:30 | 19 | 
|  |     re: E and I
    
    	How about:	E as in "steak"
    			I as in "wield"
    
    re: "X as in Quixote"
    
    	This isn't valid. The fact that the "x" is not pronounced
    	like an "x" does not make it silent. It's pronounced like
    	an "h" (i.e. the name is pronounced "kee-ho'-tay").
    
    	So how about:	X as in "prix"
    
    re: "Q as in Dos Equis"
    
    	Same reasoning as above. The "qu" is pronounced like a "k".
    	It isn't silent.
    
    --- jerry
 | 
| 483.13 | U and E | KAOA08::CUSUP_LAPLAN |  | Mon Mar 07 1988 14:11 | 1 | 
|  |     How about multiple Us and Es in  'queue'
 | 
| 483.14 | just being silly | AITG::DERAMO | Think of it as evolution in action. | Mon Mar 07 1988 23:29 | 3 | 
|  |     Re .-1:  How about multiple Us and Es in  'queue'
    
    You mean it *doesn't* rhyme with "gooey"??? (-:
 | 
| 483.15 |  | KAOA08::CUSUP_LAPLAN |  | Tue Mar 08 1988 14:01 | 11 | 
|  |     Thought of a couple of other words that can/should provide some
    missing letters, but I will leave it up to the originator of this
    exercise to make the ruling. As a matter of fact, it might be time
    for a recap of _official_ words.
    
    Worcestershire    pronounced Wooster should be good for some.
    
    The other one is that town in Mass that only New Englanders seem
    able to pronounce properly, so I won't try  Lemonster (I can't even
    spell it correctly) but you know which it is. Someone help.
    
 | 
| 483.16 | No biggie | PSTJTT::TABER | Eunuchs are a trademark of AT&T | Tue Mar 08 1988 14:55 | 6 | 
|  | >    The other one is that town in Mass that only New Englanders seem
>    able to pronounce properly, so I won't try  Lemonster (I can't even
>    spell it correctly) but you know which it is. Someone help.
That's Leominster, pronounced Lemon-stir.  
 | 
| 483.17 | a bit of the other | CLARID::BELL | David Bell, Service Technology @VBO | Tue Mar 08 1988 14:58 | 10 | 
|  |     
    As for the "other one", I think you mean Leominster (Lemster - UK
    English) which is in er. .  Shropshire (?) UK, the county town of which
    is Shrewsbury
    
    		Shrewsbury --> Shrewsbury
    		Shrewsbury --> Shrovesbury
    
    depending upon which side of the river you come from !!
    
 | 
| 483.18 | double-Dutch to me ! | ESDC2::SOBOT |  | Tue Mar 08 1988 15:00 | 4 | 
|  |     
    	The Leominster in England, UK, is pronounced "LEMSTER".
    
    	What about S'Hertogenbosch, pronounced "Denboss"  :-)
 | 
| 483.19 | Obviously, even the Dutch have trouble with these | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading UK | Tue Mar 08 1988 18:10 | 5 | 
|  |     > What about S'Hertogenbosch, pronounced "Denboss"  :-)
    
    Or 's Gravenhage, pronounced Den Haag (or The Hague, or La Haye)?
    Jeff :-)
 | 
| 483.20 | The 'es' is silent. | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Tue Mar 08 1988 22:04 | 11 | 
|  |     Massachusetts (as well as Old England) also have:
    
          Leicester   -> Lester   (Or Lesta if your a native.)
         
          Gloucester  -> Glosster
    
          
    
    And it should be noted that Worcester is _not_ pronounced the same
    as Wooster, Ohio.   Phonetically, it would be closer to Wuster (with
    a soft 'u' close to the sound in 'wood', but not as soft as in 'bus'.
 | 
| 483.21 | Now THAT's a town name! | CHARON::MCGLINCHEY | Sancho! My Armor! My TECO Macros! | Wed Mar 09 1988 22:02 | 12 | 
|  |     
    Enough with all these English towns!!
    
    If you want a real UK town name, try:
    
    Llanfairpwyllgwyngyllgogerychwyryndrobwyllllantisiliogogoch
    
    	(It's in Wales, and the sign at the train station is longer than
    the platform). I'm sure you folks can find some interesting sounds
    therein.
    
    -Glinch.
 | 
| 483.22 | We have are own local color. | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Wed Mar 09 1988 23:21 | 19 | 
|  | Re: -.1
That's not really fair!!!  That's Welsh, not English!
Perhaps not in the same league, but within the same order of magnitude,
we have a lake in Massachusetts which still carries its original American
Indian name:  Lake Chargoggagoggmanchaugagoggchaubunagungamaug. And it's
even pronouncable too!
I think this may have been discussed elsewhere in this conference a year or
two back, but there is an apocryphal legend (although denied by the experts) 
to the effect that the name was derived as the settlement of a quarrel by
two neighboring Indian tribes about where each had fishing rights in the lake.
It is supposed to mean: "You fish on your side, I'll fish on my side, and
nobody will fish in the middle."
[Since the lake is situated in the town of Webster, Mass. it is more
commonly referred to as "Webster Lake", but you will find either its full or
an abbreviated version of the correct name on many maps.]
 | 
| 483.23 | Wiss-tah, Woo-ster, Wor-sis-ter, War-ches-ter | GOLD::OPPELT | If they can't take a joke, screw 'em! | Thu Mar 10 1988 18:25 | 12 | 
|  |     re: Worcester, Gloucester, Leicester, etal
    
    	I have heard that the pronunciation can seem a little clearer
    	if you break up the word properly.  For instance, in the case
    	of Worcester, The forst syllable is "worce" (Worss with a real
    	soft "r") and the second is "ster".  Or Glouce-ster or Leice-ster.
    	The "e" following the "c" only serves to make the "c" soft,
    	it does not make a sound of its own, which, if it did, would
    	create the third syllable on which so many people seem to get
    	caught.
    
    	Joe Oppelt
 | 
| 483.24 | this is getting worster and worster | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Thu Mar 10 1988 22:18 | 1 | 
|  |     
 | 
| 483.25 | There is no "R" in "Lake Chog..." | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Mar 14 1988 18:46 | 0 | 
| 483.26 | An "R" is an "R"! | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Mon Mar 14 1988 20:47 | 8 | 
|  |     Re: .25  -< There is no "R" in "Lake Chog..." >-
    
    You had better check your references again!
    
    It may be a New England "silent R" when pronounced, but it sure as 
    h*** appears as the fourth letter in the name.  If you need further
    convincing, I can send you a copy of a map of the town of Webster on
    which the name is spelled out in its entirety.
 | 
| 483.27 |  | ANGORA::ZARLENGA | I'm Mike Zarlenga, and you're not | Tue Mar 15 1988 03:26 | 6 | 
|  | 
.25>    -< There is no "R" in "Lake Chog..." >-
    
    	Next, you'll be telling me there is no "P" in Lake Chog.
    
    -mike z
 | 
| 483.28 | er | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Sliding down the razorblade of life | Wed Mar 23 1988 14:55 | 11 | 
|  |     -er-	as in	terse
    -ir-	as in	hirsuit
    -or-	as in	worse
    -ur-	as in	nurse
    -yr-	as in 	myrrh
    
    Any more vowels that combine with r to make the -er- sound
    (not Ur sound)?
    
    b
    
 | 
| 483.29 | Two More. | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Wed Mar 23 1988 16:01 | 7 | 
|  | Re. ,-1:
-ear-	as in pearl or hearse
-our-	as in the British honour or colour (Perhaps?)
Larry
 | 
| 483.30 | Gone fishing. | AYOV18::ISMITH | David Byrne - A Head of his time. | Wed Mar 23 1988 17:25 | 6 | 
|  |     Isn't the idea here to make new spellings of words using alternative
    phonetic equivalents, such as the ghoti (perhaps a truit?) of the
    title?
    
    
    Ian.
 | 
| 483.31 | hard to make up examples without finding sounds | REGAL::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Mar 23 1988 18:40 | 11 | 
|  |     re: .28
    
    In New England you also have
    
         -a
    
    as in "winter ski parkers on sale."
    
    Or, "Flight 345 to Omaher, Nebrasker, has been delayed."
    
    --bonnie
 | 
| 483.32 | Speeling is *fun*  :-) | SLTERO::KENAH | My journey begins with my first step | Wed Mar 23 1988 19:20 | 17 | 
|  |   � -ir-        as in	hirsuit
    
    Interesting spelling -- conjures up all sorts of variants....
    
    Not hirsuit - hissuit
    Not hirsuit - hersuit
                                  
    Not hirsuit - hairsuit (hair shirt not included)
                                                        
    Not hirsuit - hursuit (as in "the hursuit of pappiness")
                        
    and finally:
    
    Not hirsuit - hirsute
                            		andrew
 | 
| 483.33 | try this for size! | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Progress:=!(going_backwards>coping) | Thu Mar 24 1988 02:12 | 47 | 
|  |     G'day,
    
    Just had a spare min or two so here is a (rotten) attempt :
    
    
    
    		CPTAARGH POUGHOSEARE
    
    Made up like this:-
    
    
       suh as in neCessary          	C 
                                       
       tuh as in PTomaine		PT
                 
                   
    	ar as in AARdvark 		AAR
    
          
        f  as in couGH			GH
    
    
    	P is silent as in swimming ;-)  P
    
        oh as in cOUgh			OU
    
    	f  as in couGH			GH
    
    	ih as in wOmen			O
    
    	suh as in Search		S
    
    	er as in LEARn			EAR
    
    	e is silent as in arE           E
                                       
    
     Gives us
    
    
    
     Staff Officer  - using the southern English pronunciation
       STARF Officer rather than staff as in Daffodil.
    
    So there!
    
    Derek
 | 
| 483.34 | earlier reply | VENICE::SKELLY |  | Fri Mar 25 1988 05:45 | 5 | 
|  |      re: .28
    
    -ar-        as in   altar
    The pronunciation doesn't alter with the meaning.
 | 
| 483.35 |  | SOS6::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Tue Aug 21 1990 16:28 | 5 | 
|  |     Re .21:
>    Llanfairpwyllgwyngyllgogerychwyryndrobwyllllantisiliogogoch
                                                          ^^^^
    That ...GOGOGOCH! You missed one go.
    			Denis.
 | 
| 483.36 | "Go directly to your individual Valhallas" | STAR::CANTOR | Diginymic name: D2E C0. | Wed Aug 22 1990 07:45 | 7 | 
|  | re .35
>    That ...GOGOGOCH! You missed one go.
And I presume she doesn't get her 200 dollars.
Dave C.
 | 
| 483.37 |  | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Aug 24 1990 20:18 | 1 | 
|  |     On the contrary!  She passed go.
 | 
| 483.38 | Oooooops!! | PHDVAX::MCGLINCHEY |  | Tue Aug 28 1990 16:51 | 14 | 
|  |     re: .35
    
    	Ooooh. I hate it when I misspell
    
    "Llanfairpwyllgwyngyllgogerychwyryndrobwyllllantisiliogogogoch".
    
	Yep, it should have a "...gogogoch" on the end.
    
    	On the other hand, it _did_ take two years for someone to
    	find it!!
    
    
    	-Glinch (who still pronounces it correctly anyway)
    
 | 
| 483.39 | ;'}  I love being mean sometimes! ;' | PEKING::AMANNP | Don't ask me why | Wed Aug 29 1990 21:52 | 6 | 
|  |     Ok Glinch,
    
    challenge for yah, write me the phoentic spelling of it.
    
    
    Paul
 | 
| 483.40 | It's almost unsanitary | PHDVAX::MCGLINCHEY |  | Thu Aug 30 1990 18:30 | 16 | 
|  |     
    	No can do. The sound of the Welsh 'LL' does not exist in the
    	modern English language, nor in its alphabet. I could write
    	how to make the sound, but when you tried it you'd get spit 
    	all over your CRT. :-)
    
    	The 'CH' is roughly the same as a German guttural sound.
    
    	The 'f' as is the 'fair' is sounded as 'v', so that syllable
    	comes out sounding like 'vire' (rhymes with 'fire').
    
    	The 'w' is pronounced 'oo', so 'pw' is pronounced 'poo'
    	(Hmm... In Wales is it Winnie the Pw? But I digress.)
    
    	-- Glinch	
    	
 | 
| 483.41 | That was easy--now try a voiceless "n"! | MINAR::BISHOP |  | Thu Aug 30 1990 23:50 | 3 | 
|  |     The "ll" is a voiceless "l".
    
    	-John Bishop
 | 
| 483.42 |  | RANGER::BACKSTROM | bwk,pjp;SwTools;pg2;lines23-24 | Sun Apr 26 1992 22:46 | 8 | 
|  | Where/when did Shaw (Bernard? Or are there other's famous enough to be 
addressed by last name only?) mention that "ghoti" could be pronounced 
"fish"?
I.e. what's the story behind this?
Thanks,
...petri
 | 
| 483.43 | GHES | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Mon Apr 27 1992 03:28 | 7 | 
|  |     I wouldn't be surprised if it was the Preface to Pygmalion if there
    was one (he usually wrote a[n] (often voluminous) preface to his
    dramas.
    
    I'd be even less surprised if I was proved wrong.
    
    b
 | 
| 483.44 | Here's the context, at least | MINAR::BISHOP |  | Mon Apr 27 1992 08:08 | 8 | 
|  |     I don't have a reference, but it was during an argument about spelling
    reform.  He was for such reform, and used "ghoti" as an example of the
    need for reform.
    
    Since Shaw was capabable of arguing about spelling reform in the
    preface to a play, it could be anywhere.
    
    		-John Bishop
 | 
| 483.45 |  | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | REM RATAM CONTRA MVNDI MORAS AGO | Tue Apr 28 1992 05:36 | 4 | 
|  |     More spelling reform.  Try "kaughphy" - what does this "word" spell,
    and why is it particularly interesting?
    
    -dick
 | 
| 483.46 |  | SUBWAY::BONNELL | giant complex multicelled organism | Tue Apr 28 1992 06:30 | 8 | 
|  | >>  Try "kaughphy".
    
    I get "coffee", though I don't see why this is particularly
    interesting.
    
    
    regards...
    ...diane
 | 
| 483.47 |  | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Apr 28 1992 10:30 | 1 | 
|  |     f = gh = ph  ?
 | 
| 483.48 |  | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Apr 29 1992 00:42 | 2 | 
|  |     	I think it starts off as "k" as in "knight", and you can pronounce
    it with your mouth shut?
 | 
| 483.49 | Very interesting, but stupid | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Wed Apr 29 1992 06:11 | 8 | 
|  |     Perhaps the interesting thing is that this spelling forces a
    pronunciation that isn't used in British English, so that "kaughphy" is
    in this sense more precise than "coffee". If "au" can indeed make a
    short /o/ in RBP [I can't think of a case off hand, but maybe there is
    one], the interesting thing changes but is related: the "au" spelling
    allows for the same two pronunciations as the "o".
    
    b
 | 
| 483.50 |  | KAOFS::S_BROOK |  | Wed Apr 29 1992 07:12 | 26 | 
|  | >    Perhaps the interesting thing is that this spelling forces a
>    pronunciation that isn't used in British English, so that "kaughphy" is
>    in this sense more precise than "coffee". If "au" can indeed make a
>    short /o/ in RBP [I can't think of a case off hand, but maybe there is
>    one], the interesting thing changes but is related: the "au" spelling
>    allows for the same two pronunciations as the "o".
Lemmesee ...
augh as in Laugh would be pronounced in certain parts of the UK as if
spelled lahff which would give an *almost* southern drawled cah-fee.
in other parts of England it would be laff which would render caffee.
augh as in the name Waugh would render a more short 'o' like sound, but
definitely not quite, because this name would be pronouced like war
without the terminal 'r' or any terminal inflection (as in the style of
the New England 'r' conservation).
Probably closer to coffee would be koughphy ough as in cough ... (hack hack!)
Stuart
 | 
| 483.51 |  | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Apr 29 1992 09:09 | 8 | 
|  |     
    Diane, didn't you used to have "jersey girl" as a personal name? If so,
    we may be able to clear this up.
    
    In northern New Jersey, it's "cawfee" and "chawklit" rather than coffee
    and chocolate...
    
    JP (refugee from Bergen County, NJ)
 | 
| 483.52 |  | SUBWAY::BONNELL | giant complex multicelled organism | Wed Apr 29 1992 11:25 | 17 | 
|  |     JP
    
>>    Diane, didn't you used to have "jersey girl" as a personal name? If so,
    
    yup.
    
>>    In northern New Jersey, it's "cawfee" and "chawklit" rather than coffee
    
    I see your point.  Perhaps this goes back to the UNIX-eunuchs debate - 
    we tend to hear what we expect, not what is.  Or, in this case, we hear
    what is, and it sounds "perfickly nawmal".
    
    So, now that you've escaped, how do you pronounce "coffee"?
    
    
    regards...
    ...diane
 | 
| 483.53 |  | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Wed Apr 29 1992 21:50 | 6 | 
|  |     Who named Australia?  How did they pronounce it at that time?
    
    And what was the auld pronunciation of a forgot acquaintance?
    
    Even if those words were not English, the pronunciation should come
    automatically.
 | 
| 483.54 | Re .53, and who named Austria? | PAOIS::HILL | Another migrant worker! | Thu Apr 30 1992 01:22 | 3 | 
|  |     'au' also sounds like RBP 'o' in Austria...
    
    Nick
 | 
| 483.55 | Kaughphy | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | REM RATAM CONTRA MVNDI MORAS AGO | Thu Apr 30 1992 06:01 | 7 | 
|  | What's interesting about "kaughphy" is that it contains none of the
letters present in the word whose pronunciation it mimics.
Well, hey, *I* think it's an interesting comment on the lack of spelling
and pronunciation standards in the English language.
-dick
 | 
| 483.56 | Australia... | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | REM RATAM CONTRA MVNDI MORAS AGO | Thu Apr 30 1992 06:19 | 15 | 
|  | ...was named by European cartographers in the 1600s, using Latin.  The
name was originally Terra Australis, which is a feminine singular Latin
phrase that means "southern land."  The original pronunciation would
have been roughly au-`strah-liss, where au is pronounced as in German.
Tha name gradually migrated to Australia (Au-`strah-lyah) through the
unscholarly misapprehension that "terra" is a plural neuter form meaning
"lands."  "Australia" is the correct neuter plural of "australis."
The modern pronunciation with a long `a' sound evolved in English as
-strah- became -strye- which then became -stray- in the same manner that
the latin -ae- sound, which was originally like our long letter `i' (as
in "wise"), was allowed to become -ay- (as in "pay").
-dick
 | 
| 483.57 |  | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Thu Apr 30 1992 18:59 | 14 | 
|  |     G'day,
    
     No wonder the inhabitants call it Oz.... all that interlectshul
    stufff!!
    
    
    8-)
    
    
    
    derek
    and they speak 'strine'.....
    
    
 | 
| 483.58 | Diane, | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri May 01 1992 05:24 | 15 | 
|  |     
    Re: .52
    
    I pronounce coffee such that the first syllable rhymes with the first
    syllable of sophomore. But my family looks at me strangely when I do...
    
    I think (hope) that the time I spent in Ohio, Maryland, and now New
    Hampshire has left me with a "standard American" accent. I wish I was
    better at reproducing accents because I just love the sound of a West
    Virginia drawl or a down-easter (Maine) or a Scots burr.
    
    However, I can say "Balmer, Marlin" (that's Baltimore, Maryland to the
    rest of the English-speaking world.
    
    JP
 | 
| 483.59 |  | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri May 01 1992 14:53 | 6 | 
|  |     Ohio, if it was northern Ohio, may have helped you toward speaking
    standard American, but Maryland and New Hampshire won't.
    
    Iowa, the eastern Dakotas, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, northern
    Illinois, northern Indiana, and northern Ohio are almost entirely
    standard American.  Outside of that it gets problematic.
 | 
| 483.60 |  | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Mon May 04 1992 05:58 | 7 | 
|  |     
    Yup, it was Cleveland, on the shores of beautiful Lake Erie. Now that
    you mention it, I remember taking a trip to southern Ohio, near
    Kentucky. I had a real hard time understanding the local dialect at
    all!
    
    JP
 | 
| 483.61 | More Ohio-isms | MR4DEC::RICH |  | Tue May 05 1992 07:51 | 13 | 
|  |     Growing up in OHIO, I remember that if you asked someone to pronounce
    three or four words you could pretty well place them around the state.
    
    eg: OHIO  
    	prounounced Oh-HIGH-Yoh placed you NorthWest
    		    Oh-HIGH-Yuh placed you South of Columbus ("C'lumbis")
    		    Oh-HIGH-Yer placed you West (I think) near In-Dee-AN-er
    
        PEN
    	pronounced  Pehn = Northern OHIO
                    Pihn = Suth'n Ohia   ("pihn? Ball-point or safety?")
    
        Don't remember any others.
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| 483.62 |  | SUBWAY::BONNELL | giant complex multicelled organism | Tue May 05 1992 13:22 | 9 | 
|  |     Well, I went to college near C'lumbis.  Another nearby town was 
    "Nerk", which was somewhat confusing to a native Jerseyan, who'd
    always thought it "NEW'rk".  I'm told in Delaware, it's "newARK".
    
    
    
    
    regards...
    ...diane
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| 483.63 | As in "Slop the pigs in the pehn" | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Always nothing left to say | Wed May 06 1992 09:56 | 7 | 
|  | >        PEN
>    	pronounced  Pehn = Northern OHIO
>                    Pihn = Suth'n Ohia   ("pihn? Ball-point or safety?")
    
    In Mazeura, we pronounced both "pin" and "pen" as "pehn".
    
    Ray
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| 483.64 | ah, but what part of the country is it in? | SMURF::BRUCE | discontinuous transformation to win-win | Thu Oct 08 1992 14:11 | 3 | 
|  |     During my days in Ohio, I thought I heard the pronunciation of the
    state name as uh-HI-uh (but that would be harder for the OSU band to
    spell :-).
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