What boggles my mind is:
Tektronics
Techtronix
TekTronics
It's
Tektronix
It's right there on the front panel.
This discussion reminded me of a Top Gear episode:
I live in the USA, and I have wondered about this very subject. The English language is really messed up. WHY is the word small so big yet the word big is so small? It is confusing.
.. and we park in the driveway and drive in the parkway.
This discussion reminded me of a Top Gear episode:
A brand of braid changed the way I pronounce it. I started saying SOL-der when I noticed the spelling on the roll and it didn't look quite right. Before that I never thought of it. (see photo).
So this American says it your way, cause another American spelled it the other way.
in the USA the L is silent
just like the silent P in swimming
"Ass hole" sounds a lot more refined than "arse hole".
"Ass hole" sounds a lot more refined than "arse hole".
But an"arse" rolls off the tongue with more gusto and feel than an "ass."
I'm OK with soh'der, why not? Maybe it started in Boston?
What TRULY needs an explanation is "Worcestershire Sauce" being called Worster Sauce...
I'm OK with soh'der, why not? Maybe it started in Boston?
What TRULY needs an explanation is "Worcestershire Sauce" being called Worster Sauce...
It's not that baffling. It was invented in Worcester, which (despite being a city) is the county town of Worcestershire. Sometimes it's called Worcestershire sauce, and sometimes Worcester sauce.
As for why Worcester is pronounced "Wooster", the contraction is fairly common in England. Two other county towns (also cities) are Gloucester (pronounced "Gloster") and Leicester (pronounced "Lester"), and other towns include Bicester (pronounced "Bister"), and Alcester (pronounced "Alster").
And it's not just us Brits doing it. There are cities called Worcester, Gloucester and Leicester in Massachusetts - all pronounced like their English namesakes.
Little do they know there isn't even an exact official consensus on that either
I always found it mildly annoying that the official postal abbreviation for Gloucestershire is Glos. rather than, say, Gloucs.
Never mind place names, I'd like to challenge the colonials to pronounce names like Cholmondeley, Featherstonhaugh, Dalziel, Menzies, Mainwaring, Beauchamp, Wodehouse.
Mainwaring is pronounced as it is spelt by everybody I have run into
And why,oh why, is the abbreviation for Hampshire ,"Hants"?
The abbreviated form is derived from the Old English Hantum plus Scir (meaning a district governed from the settlement now known as Southampton) and the Anglo-Saxons called it Hamtunschire. At the time of the Domesday Book (1086) this was compressed to Hantescire.
Mainwaring is pronounced as it is spelt by everybody I have run into
I know "Dad's Army" has been shown in Oz, because a number of missing episodes were returned to the BBC from there. Presumably not recently, though?QuoteAnd why,oh why, is the abbreviation for Hampshire ,"Hants"?
You can blame William the Conqueror:QuoteThe abbreviated form is derived from the Old English Hantum plus Scir (meaning a district governed from the settlement now known as Southampton) and the Anglo-Saxons called it Hamtunschire. At the time of the Domesday Book (1086) this was compressed to Hantescire.