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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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The other day while trying to combat PC-withdrawal sypmtons by watching Australia's home shopping channel, TVSN. I heard a presenter pronounce "jewellery" as "jurry". The lady in question seemed to have a hybrid Oz/US accent, but nothing prepared me for that abomination! I'm used to hearing "joolry" but wondered if anybody had ever heard "jurry" before. I ask at least partly because it's 22:25 here, and still 20 degrees Celsius, which makes sleeping difficult. Adieu.
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Joined: Jun 2000
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Max, I've heard what I would phoneticise as 'jewry'. Given your weird and wonderful Zild (whaddya mean no diphthong in rain?!?), this may be the same thing. As for the jury, on the evidence so far it rules that your jewellery is quite clearly hot and you have no legal right to it. Please submit it to me for safekeeping until the rightful owner can be ascertained!
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Joined: Jul 2000
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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> As for the jury, on the evidence so far it rules that your jewellery is quite clearly hot and you have no legal right to it. Please submit it to me for safekeeping until the rightful owner can be ascertained!
Drat. You beat me to it. I was going to brooch the subject of a lis pendant and then run rings around it. In fact, there was supposed to be a court earring on it but the judge got torqued off and crowned the lawyer. I saw him wampum on the head, screaming about the chain of evidence (or was it the evidence of chain?) Oh goodness. It's enough to send Scarlett back to Tiara.
TEd
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Joined: Mar 2000
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Oh, man, you-all are great! I do have a question for you, Max--well, everybody, really: How is the word jewellery pronounced (correctly) where you live? Sometimes I hear three syllables--jew-el-ry--and occasionally, four--jew-el-er-ee.
I found your post fascinating: I'd thought "jew-ry" was confined to rural SE U.S.! Joo-ler-ee really gets on my nerves. Ugh.
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Joined: Jul 2000
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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In my haste to create atrocious puns, I almost missed something in your seminal post. In England do you have the word "jewellery?" Here in the US we would write jewelry. And most of the people I know would pronounce it JOO el ree with the middle syllable almost swallowed, for lack of a better term. It would be considered non-standard to say JOO le ree or JOOlree, though I have heard both.
TEd
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Joined: Dec 2000
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Can you even clearly distinguish these possible pronunciations? I can't decide precisely which of these four I say:
(1) jool, single syllable, pure long vowel (2) joo-al, two syllables, neutral vowel in second (3) joo-ll, two syllables, second being syllabic consonant (4) jua-l, single syllable, diphthong
I probably say jua-l, going towards jool in quick speech. When adding syllables the neutral vowel is further reduced to zero: jool-a-ri; but there is also the possibility of reducing the added -ar to zero vowel, thus jua-lri, which I might be inclined to say if I was being more careful. I think the underlying pronunciation is ju-al-ar-i with two neutral vowels, one of which has to go.
The non-US spelling is jewellery.
Actually in the popular speech round here, r becomes w as does postvocalic l, so it would be ju-w-wi.
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