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NechaMom
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Today at 4:39 pm
amother Clover wrote: | Oh yay - we’re doing this!
Sigsdy(60)
Fivdy (50)
🙉🙉 |
Thirdy
Fordy
Sevendy
Eighdy
Ninedy
Why are these fine and the ones you mentioned not?
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Reality
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Today at 5:55 pm
zaq wrote: | When they spell it DRAW, it's not a dialect; it's wrong. Nobody on Imamotha who wants to declutter her "draws"--and writes it that way-- writes about her sista who uses butta to make challer, even if she pronounces it that way.
My childhood bff stored things in "drows", rhymes with "close." This is not tomayto, tomahto. |
Well that poster also mentioned idear and Ahuver, which have never been written anywhere! My post was addressing pronunciation not imamother posts.
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amother
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Today at 5:58 pm
NechaMom wrote: | Thirdy
Fordy
Sevendy
Eighdy
Ninedy
Why are these fine and the ones you mentioned not? |
I’m with team Clover.
Turning a hard T sound into a softer D-like T, in middle of a word, sounds fine to me. It might just be a dialect because I see it doesn’t bother Clover either. When I say ninety I don’t pronounce the T the way I pronounce T at the beginning of a word. Say Tamara will take eighty or ninety tots in her taxi. You probably also say the T’s differently.
Turning the f in fifty into a v or the x in sixty into gz is the equivalent of scratching nails on the blackboard - to my ears at least.
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amother
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Today at 6:03 pm
amother Marigold wrote: | These are all different though
“Ax” is the way black people say it
“Draws” is just a plain old mistake
“Idear” is a dialect where people add an R sound to words ending with an A. I think people in northeast USA speak like this. I had a teacher who spoke like this and she called me “Ahuver”. Drove me crazy |
I am deeply sorry you went through this Marigold. I think a teacher who calls Ahuva - Ahuver should be fired. On the spot. Fivdy sounds to me, as I mentioned, like nails on the blackboard. But putting a child through that is completely unacceptable and unforgivable.
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amother
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Today at 6:05 pm
Cheiny wrote: | I “use to,” instead of “used to.” |
How in the world could you tell a difference when speaking?
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NechaMom
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Today at 6:05 pm
amother Rose wrote: | I’m with team Clover.
Turning a hard T sound into a softer D-like T, in middle of a word, sounds fine to me. It might just be a dialect because I see it doesn’t bother Clover either. When I say ninety I don’t pronounce the T the way I pronounce T at the beginning of a word. Say Tamara will take eighty or ninety tots in her taxi. You probably also say the T’s differently.
Turning the f in fifty into a v or the x in sixty into gz is the equivalent of scratching nails on the blackboard - to my ears at least. |
This explains it well and answers my question.
So you'd be fine with
Fifdy
Sixdy
But if we keep the F and X in those words it will be easier to just keep the T too so that's why the T is usually stronger in these two than in those I mentioned.
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NechaMom
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Today at 6:10 pm
amother Gray wrote: | How in the world could you tell a difference when speaking? |
Maybe she meant in writing
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amother
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Today at 7:04 pm
amother Brass wrote: | A lot of pronunciations are acceptable and common in different areas and among various groups of people.
I say exetra (although it's not a word I say often) because that's how I hear it said. I'm aware that it is written etcetera, and I write it correctly. I don't think I'm lazy just because I'm using a common pronunciation that people in my environment use and understand. I'll speak correctly when the setting requires it. |
You don't think people will understand you if you say et cetera rather than exetera?
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amother
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Today at 7:12 pm
amother Sand wrote: | Don't must
Being
Confectionery sugar
I once heard someone say diarrheaer |
What's wrong with the word being?
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amother
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Today at 7:15 pm
amother Bisque wrote: | FYI, the days of the week can be pronounced day at the end or dee at the end. Like sundee, mundee, or Sunday Monday. Both are correct. And I’ve lived all over the us and have never heard them referred to the first way. |
You've lived all over the US and never heard Sunday pronounced as Sunday? I admit I haven't lived in more than 3 states but I've never heard days of the week pronounced with an ee sound at the end.
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amother
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Today at 7:15 pm
amother Winterberry wrote: | Not everyone is from the same city. There is a range of dialects and pronounciations. Just because that is what you learnt is correct for you, someone else can learn something different where they live and also be correct. Potato/Potahto argument. And when you start going international, no the american accent is really not the only one. |
This does not apply to etc vs ect.
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amother
Jetblack
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Today at 8:25 pm
‘It’s very complicating’ instead of complicated
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amother
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Today at 8:28 pm
amother Pumpkin wrote: | You've lived all over the US and never heard Sunday pronounced as Sunday? I admit I haven't lived in more than 3 states but I've never heard days of the week pronounced with an ee sound at the end. |
No, I said I haven’t heard them pronounced as Sundee Mondee. I think it’s a deep southern thing, and I haven’t lived in the Deep South.
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amother
Mulberry
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Today at 8:44 pm
amother Bisque wrote: | No, I said I haven’t heard them pronounced as Sundee Mondee. I think it’s a deep southern thing, and I haven’t lived in the Deep South. |
Read your post again. You wrote you've never heard them being pronounced Sun-day.
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amother
Myrtle
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Today at 8:47 pm
I have never heard sundee mondee. How does that sound? Who speaks that way which area?
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amother
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Today at 8:50 pm
amother Mulberry wrote: | Read your post again. You wrote you've never heard them being pronounced Sun-day. |
Yeah, you said "FYI, the days of the week can be pronounced day at the end or dee at the end" and then you said you've never heard it the first way.
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amother
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Today at 8:54 pm
Where are you being for Shabbos?
I’m being a clown for Purim.
We’re being by my parents for YT.
Arrrrgggghh makes me want to rip my ears off.
Where are you going to be?
I’m dressing up as a clown.
We’re going to/staying at my parents for YT.
And yes to fivdy and sigzdy omg.
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amother
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Today at 8:57 pm
Oh and to clear up the confusion with amother bisque.
She said
FYI, the days of the week can be pronounced day at the end or dee at the end. Like sundee, mundee, or Sunday Monday. Both are correct. And I’ve lived all over the us and have never heard them referred to the first way.
When she says “the first way”
She’s referring to this sentence; Like sundee, mundee, or Sunday Monday
And the rest of you are referring to this sentence: FYI, the days of the week can be pronounced day at the end or dee at the end.
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