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Speaking of strawberries the other day, which are just coming into season (yum,yum!), I caught myself saying strawBEARY (or, BAREY) instead of strawBERRY (or, BURY). Reflecting upon this it seems that I have readily used both pronunciations over the years when speaking of berries of all kinds, without any rhyme or reason, and believe this to be just an aberration of lazy linguistics. Is anyone aware of any dialect or accent or region which prefers one pronunciation over the other? Does anyone else use both these verbal forms when speaking of the berry? Does anyone here use *only one or the other? Would be interested to hear...


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Janie Hibler, The Berry Bible, New York: William Morrow, 2004.

Just bought it at Powell's Bookstore in Portland. It doesn't answer Whitman's question but I was so excited about getting this book I just had to share.


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Straw Burry? Who taught you to per noun sit that way?

Besides, berry, beary, and bury are exact homophones in my dialect anyway.

http://www.bartleby.com/61/99/B0569900.html


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STRAW~b'ri jam for me, please (fresh-made this last weekend) and wonderful Spanish berries (BERR~iz) that are not tasteless mush like so much of the modern English agro-chemical synthesised pap... they should be ploughed straight back in - that buries (BERR-ease) them suitably.

When picking strawberries in Kent years ago, you would often be working alongside hopfields, a vital ingredient of beery refreshments - the thought of several cooling draughts in the evening made the hot work much more bearable (BAIR~uh~bul).


#141536 03/31/05 11:39 AM
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> berry, beary, and bury are exact homophones in my dialect anyway.

yup. in my pikanik basket, too...



formerly known as etaoin...
#141537 03/31/05 01:23 PM
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My father is from Ireland. I learned to say "bury" to rhyme with "furry". Later I learned to say it to rhyme with "hairy", at least when referring to an interment. As a suffix on a place name, it is actually the furry-bury, although I've noticed that many Northern Ontarians speak of the mystical city of Sudberry (Sudbury).


#141538 03/31/05 01:39 PM
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I'm with mav - STRAW~b'ri. The b'r is like the one in Edinb'ruh. Or maybe not...quite.


#141539 03/31/05 05:52 PM
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STRAW~b'ri

Why would anyone make straw-flavored cheese?


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Think of it as camembert cheese straws, Musick.


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On the contrary, I like you both. In your different ways. Some very different.


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