@shderz@sh.itjust.works to Comic Strips@lemmy.worldEnglish • 5 months agoI don't know how to say this to you...sh.itjust.worksimagemessage-square88fedilinkarrow-up1971arrow-down118
arrow-up1953arrow-down1imageI don't know how to say this to you...sh.itjust.works@shderz@sh.itjust.works to Comic Strips@lemmy.worldEnglish • 5 months agomessage-square88fedilink
minus-square@MY_ANUS_IS_BLEEDING@lemm.eelinkfedilink11•5 months agoDepends on how you pronounce shire. Americans tend to pronounce it like the hobbit place when it’s more like “shuh”.
minus-square@klemptor@startrek.websitelinkfedilink6•5 months agoI’m from New Jersey and I pronounce it Wuh-stah-shur. I think that’s reasonably correct?
minus-square@Krauerking@lemy.lollinkfedilink1•5 months agoI do Woor-cest-er-sure. Also northeast US but a lot less pin downable. I think of it like a slurred “war-chest” sound. But the “C” seems unused by most.
minus-squareXIIIesqlinkfedilink2•edit-25 months agoI dk where you Americans are getting the “sure” part from, it’s much more like “she-er” or if your more northern it’d be a bit more like “sher”.
minus-square@ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglish1•5 months agoWait, Tolkien was English. He didn’t mean “Shire” to be pronounced like we Americans do it?
minus-squarePsychadelligoatlinkfedilinkEnglish2•5 months agoHe did As a standalone word it’s Shire as we say it, but put it at the end of a word and you pronounce it differently Lancashire is lanka-sheer, for example
Wooster-shire
Depends on how you pronounce shire. Americans tend to pronounce it like the hobbit place when it’s more like “shuh”.
I’m from New Jersey and I pronounce it Wuh-stah-shur. I think that’s reasonably correct?
I second this pronunciation.
I do Woor-cest-er-sure.
Also northeast US but a lot less pin downable. I think of it like a slurred “war-chest” sound. But the “C” seems unused by most.
I dk where you Americans are getting the “sure” part from, it’s much more like “she-er” or if your more northern it’d be a bit more like “sher”.
Wait, Tolkien was English. He didn’t mean “Shire” to be pronounced like we Americans do it?
He did
As a standalone word it’s Shire as we say it, but put it at the end of a word and you pronounce it differently
Lancashire is lanka-sheer, for example
I hear “Were-Chest-Sure” around here.