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#190284 04/05/10 07:05 AM
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Umber Offline OP
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Hi. In the UK we pronounce Desideratum as de-zid-uh-rah-tuhm. I trust my phonetics are correct.

Umber #190285 04/05/10 10:36 AM
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That's the way I pronounce it, too, and I'm an USn. Well, with emphasis on the RAH. But maybe that's what he meant by RAA. Welcome the the monkey house.

Faldage #190290 04/05/10 03:11 PM
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I like bananas too.

That is the way we pronounce it as well here in the Great Plains.


Welcome.


----please, draw me a sheep----
LukeJavan8 #190296 04/05/10 07:53 PM
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In the delta, we say daisy-day-ráh-tuhm.

Last edited by BranShea; 04/06/10 08:43 AM. Reason: marshes, delta?
BranShea #190298 04/05/10 08:08 PM
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Small marshlands?
A locale?


----please, draw me a sheep----
Umber #190299 04/05/10 08:27 PM
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journeyman
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Originally Posted By: Umber
Hi. In the UK we pronounce Desideratum as de-zid-uh-rah-tuhm. I trust my phonetics are correct.


We pronounce it the same way on Long Island, accent on the rah. Although some folks on the north shore who speak with teeth clenched might add a soft accent on the zid as well.

kah454 #190301 04/06/10 01:28 PM
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Desiderata is a poem by Max Ehrmann (1872-1945), a Terre Haute poet/lawyer, which begins "Go placidly amid the noise and haste" and goes on to list the ingredients most desirable in a well-lived life. It is sometimes wrongly attributed to "found in Old St. Paul's church, Baltimore", and was set to music during the 1970s.

sarahutch #190304 04/06/10 03:49 PM
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Welcome sarahutch. Here's your poem I went looking for after reading your post.
Desiderata
Apparently sometimes a bit of good advice comes in the form of a poem. Thank you.

BranShea #190305 04/06/10 04:39 PM
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And here is one of the songs listed in YouTube as mentioned
above:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pw-hGKruOYQ&feature=fvst


----please, draw me a sheep----
sarahutch #190306 04/06/10 06:12 PM
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journeyman
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Originally Posted By: sarahutch
Desiderata is a poem by Max Ehrmann (1872-1945), a Terre Haute poet/lawyer, which begins "Go placidly amid the noise and haste" and goes on to list the ingredients most desirable in a well-lived life. It is sometimes wrongly attributed to "found in Old St. Paul's church, Baltimore", and was set to music during the 1970s.


Welcome this is a great poem. Still have a framed copy of it.

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