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Bob LeChevalier wrote: > > "Bill Bonde ( the oblique allusion in lieu of the frontal attack )" > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >Bob LeChevalier wrote: > >> Holger Dansk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> >On Mon, 01 Dec 2003 20:25:40 -0500, Bob LeChevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >> >wrote: > >> > > >> >>The problem you have is that there is NO "correct pronunciation" of > >> >>English. Each dialect does it differently, and NONE of them are > >> >>"right" or "wrong". > >> > > >> >If you do not realize that the negro pronunciation of the words that I > >> >mentioned above is not correct then you have a problem with perception. > >> > >> No. I have a problem with the notion of "correct" when it comes to > >> English pronunciation. Unlike French, we have no Academie, and there > >> is no universal standard of "correct" pronunciation. > >> > >There's nothing wrong with thinking that how you say words is the > >correct way. It's natural. We have dictionary producers to give us some > >idea of how words are being mostly pronounced. If we all sounded exactly > >network standard, would that be ideal? (Granted Peter Jennings should > >speak American and Brokaw should take the cotton out of his mouth.) > > So even network standard isn't standard among those on the network. > If everyone spoke exactly the same, we couldn't tell each other apart by voice. In any case, Brokaw and Jennings are *not* network standard in that Jennings has a Canadian accent and Brokaw a weird lisp or something. > >> My wife distinguishes between "can" the noun, and "can" the verb, and > >> between "Mary", "merry" and "marry". They are homonyms to me. She is > >> bothered when the girl's name "Dawn" and "Don" are pronounced the > >> same, but "Dawn" pronounces her own name such that my wife hears > >> "Don". You would apparently say that Dawn cannot pronounce her own > >> name correctly, which is sheer idiocy. > >> > >Are you in Washington state? > > I'm in Virginia, but raised on the San Francisco peninsula by parents > from Michigan and NYC, and I went to college in Michigan; the most > common dialect spoken in the bay area is a midwestern derivative. My > wife is from Philadelphia, which is a city with one of the most > distinctive and localized accents in the country. > I would pronounce 'Don' and 'Dawn' the same way. 'Caught' and 'cot' are the same as well, I guess for the same reason. I have to be careful to say 'roof' with the oo and not a schwa or something close. I hear this form of speech all the time around here including on radio ads for 'roofers' (called 'r<schwa>ffers' in the ad). I think that eastern Washington state is a hotbed of people who say 'w<schwa>f' for 'wolf'.
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