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Do any of you rhetoric buffs know this term? is it listed in the Book? i found it at one of my favorite rhetorical reference sites, and supposedly it describes the alteration from unaccented English of a sound in a word, eg: "strond" for "strand"...
...which segues conveniently into a question that i've been meaning to pose: When the OED offers pronunciations, does it give them in British (dripping in syncope and the aforementioned antistoecon), or in unaccentedenglish? or are both pronunciations offered?
btw, a quick mental tally tells me that each of you dark-side-of-the-ponders (who could potentionally misinterpret parts of this post) knows me well enough to be certain i'm teasing, but if i've misguaged anyone, i'm heartily sorry
Dear caradea: Nobody on the board has a command of rhetoric inferior to mine, but I keep trying to learn a bit. Your "stond" vs "strand" seems to ring a bell - I think I saw it in a poem, with Scottish dialect,rhyming with "hond" for "hand".
I like the example in the byu site - "A pun is its own reword"
As to Brit pronunciation, I leave that to some of our UK friends.
Max tells us unaccented English is only spoken here
So, do y'all go to Earl's Academy of Accents to learn how to speak the way y'all do when you're visiting other places?
So, do y'all go to Earl's Academy of Accents to learn how to speak the way y'all do when you're visiting other places?
Nope. YOU speak accented English ...
The idiot also known as Capfka ...
YOU speak accented English ...
Well, yeah. I know that cause Rubrick told me. Maybe you should FtF with him sometime.
Hey, Faldage: Does FIF mean "Favorite Incoming Finger?" A gay urologist told us he offered to refer one of his prostate massage cases to an urologist whose office was nearer to the patient, but the patient declined on the grounds that "Nobody's got a finger like yours!"
Sponsors of The Prairie Home Companion on USn NPR:
http://phc.mpr.org/performances/19970503/97_0503ACCENT.htm
Garrison Keillor: We'll continue with our English Accent Contest after this word from Earl's Academy of Accents in
the Maplewood Mall. Earl-- --
TR (SWEDISH): Yeah, here at Earl's we teach, oh, I'd say about fourteen different accents, thirteen or
fourteen, and you know, I'd say that the English accent is about our most popular one, wouldn't you say
that, there, Inge?
TR (SWEDISH WOMAN): Oh yeah, it's English, that's for sure. Gotta be English then.
TR (SWEDISH): Yeah, we used to get more for the French, but now it's the English. Yeah.
GK: Very good. Earl's Academy of Accents in the Maplewood Mall. A good accent could be helpful to
your career ---- if you're a dancer or a violinist and you happen to be from Bismarck, N.D., don't be from
Bismarck, be from St. Petersburg. It'll help.
TR (RUSSIAN): I used to be from Bismarck, and now I'm from St. Petersburg. It really helped me a lot.
GK: Of course it did. If you're making a career in the food industry, you don't want a voice like this---
TR (MIDWESTERN): So howdja like that Beaujolais then, huh? That hit the spot?
GK: You want a voice like this----
TR (FRENCH): The wine, monsieur, I think you will appreciate the body, the texture, the --- the--- what
do you call it--- the (FRENCH GIBBERISH)-----
GK: Or you want a voice like this-----
TR (ITALIAN): This Barolo, this is really a beautiful wine, so--- it's so--- so---- (ITALIAN
GIBBERISH)----
GK: You don't want this voice.
TR: (MIDWEST) I got a Barolo, I got a Chianti, they're both real good. Real fine.
GK: And of course if you're not bright, if you have no aesthetic taste whatsoever, if you're obsessed with
violence and wealth and kinky sex, but you still want to seem cultured among midwesterners, this accent
will open every door----
TR (BRIT): Oh, what a pleasure to see you. Dear, dear, dear. Oh my. How thrilling. How divine.
GK: No matter what you're selling, you can get a higher price with that voice.
TR (BRIT): These are our tea cosies and they're hand-woven by vicars' wives in Lancashire.
GK: Useful for authors too.
TR (BRIT): I'd like to read a few lines from my novella, Fearsome Hove The Twilight Hour.
GK: Earl's Academy of Accents. Maybe they can help you.
TR (SWEDISH): Yeah, give us a call and we'll see what we can do.
(TRUMPET FANFARE)
That's Eff tee Eff, Dr. Bill. Stands for Face to Face. It's for when you meet a cyberfriend in Real Life (RL).
... cases to an urologist whose office ...
Since urologist is pronounced with a Y sound at the beginning, shouldn't this be a urologist, even though the word begins with a vowel?
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