kelljones Report post Posted March 2, 2009 Okay, "EANACH DHÚIN" ...help?? Share this post Link to post
naeelah Report post Posted March 2, 2009 My best guess is: eanach = long a + "nach" like you say "loch". dhuin = chewin (with the "ch" pronounced a bit harder than English) Do feel free to correct me or suggest an alternative! Share this post Link to post
Molls Report post Posted March 2, 2009 Hmmm... I'm wearing Khrysee today, and I'm wondering Cry-see? Kris-see? Kris-say? Any ideas? Share this post Link to post
lilirose Report post Posted March 2, 2009 Okay, "EANACH DHÚIN" ...help?? Pronunciations of Irish words can vary depending on the part of Ireland you're in, but I'd either pronounce it "Ee-nack Doon" or "Ee-nuck Doon". The second word is definitely "Doon", though. Share this post Link to post
Indigo78 Report post Posted March 2, 2009 Hmmm... I'm wearing Khrysee today, and I'm wondering Cry-see? Kris-see? Kris-say? Any ideas? I say Cry-see, but I could be wrong. Very wrong. Share this post Link to post
kelljones Report post Posted March 3, 2009 Okay, "EANACH DHÚIN" ...help?? Pronunciations of Irish words can vary depending on the part of Ireland you're in, but I'd either pronounce it "Ee-nack Doon" or "Ee-nuck Doon". The second word is definitely "Doon", though. Thanks!! Share this post Link to post
septima_pica Report post Posted March 31, 2009 WRT "Khrysee": HAHA you just stepped into Greek, you're in trouble now! Which is to say: If you want to have the Classical Greek pronunciation, the Y is pronounced as a ü (or like French u). If you want modern Greek, it's pronounced as "ee" (Spanish i). So you have either "Khrü-say" or "Khree-say", where by "say" I mean pronounced as the English word. Share this post Link to post
TPOD Report post Posted March 31, 2009 hee. I went round and round with it and finally I've been saying "Chris-ee", like the girl's name. Share this post Link to post
ahoythere Report post Posted August 3, 2009 (edited) Since I was just asked about this today, I thought I'd post this Kuang Shi is pronounced koo-ong (said quickly in one word, rhymes with the English "long") shh (with a roll of the tongue, like starting to say "Shrek"). EDIT: LOL, I completely forgot about the letter "w"! Explaining that "Kuang" is pronounced like kwong is probably easier to understand than koo-ong Edited August 4, 2009 by ahoythere Share this post Link to post
loverstreet Report post Posted August 3, 2009 Since I was just asked about this today, I thought I'd post this Kuang Shi is pronounced koo-ong (said quickly in one word, rhymes with the English "long") shh (with a roll of the tongue, like starting to say "Shrek"). Wow! Thanks for that! Its one of my summertime favorites, and I've most certainly been butchering the pronunciation - just like it looks, but with a country twang. Share this post Link to post
ahoythere Report post Posted August 4, 2009 No problem! I've butchered many a pinyin (and shall continue to), despite the fact that I grew up in a Mandarin-speaking family and am taking Mandarin language classes *cough cough* Share this post Link to post
Christy Report post Posted August 8, 2009 This is probably an easy one but I wasn't quite sure on the pronunciation; Dana O'Shee. Is the last part like "Shay" or is it like "She" as in "She went shopping"? Thanks! Share this post Link to post
obsidienne Report post Posted August 8, 2009 I loved wearing Khajuraho for just that reason! 'kaj ur a ho! If you say it really fast out loud, it sounds like "God, you're a ho!" ;D Share this post Link to post
Moryssa Report post Posted August 13, 2009 This is probably an easy one but I wasn't quite sure on the pronunciation; Dana O'Shee. Is the last part like "Shay" or is it like "She" as in "She went shopping"? Thanks! I don't know for sure... I just know how *I* pronounce it. Which is like "Shay". And both of the a's in "Dana" are short a's... so it rhymes with "susanna". Now I'm curious whether it's correct, though. Heh. --M Share this post Link to post
unlaced Report post Posted August 13, 2009 Okay this is a silly question but is Ivanushka pronounced like: EE-vanushka or EYE-vanushka. Share this post Link to post
Mrs.Black Report post Posted August 13, 2009 Okay this is a silly question but is Ivanushka pronounced like: EE-vanushka or EYE-vanushka. I knew my six years of study at Moscow State University would come in handy some day . Ivanushka is an affectionate form of the Russian name Ivan (eevAn), and it's pronounced "eevAnushka". Share this post Link to post
ShadowMaat Report post Posted August 14, 2009 (edited) I've always said Bee-pal unless I'm talking to someone who doesn't know about the lab and then I use the full name. On the other hand I always thought it was L-O-L cats until I heard it said LAWL cats, which just strikes me as bizarre. The Dana O'Shee thing has been troubling me for a while, so I'm glad to see it being discussed without me having to do too much digging. I've been pronouncing R'lyeh as ruh-LAY cos that's how it's sung in Shoggoth on the Roof, but that could have been for rhyming purposes and rul-YEH looks like it might be a better match. What about Xanthe? Is it ZAN-thee like I've been saying or is the X more of an S or what? I do kinda wish there was a way to limit a search to an individual thread. *sigh* Edited August 14, 2009 by ShadowMaat Share this post Link to post
lilirose Report post Posted August 14, 2009 I do kinda wish there was a way to limit a search to an individual thread. *sigh* Er, there is- see the little box just under the thread title that says "Enter Keywords" with a button next to it that says "search topic"? You can enter a keyword there to search the thread. </end minor hijack> Share this post Link to post
Moryssa Report post Posted August 14, 2009 What about Xanthe? Is it ZAN-thee like I've been saying or is the X more of an S or what? I ignore the "e" when I say it -- so it's one syllable and comes out more like "Zanth". --M Share this post Link to post
ShadowMaat Report post Posted August 15, 2009 Er, there is- see the little box just under the thread title that says "Enter Keywords" with a button next to it that says "search topic"? You can enter a keyword there to search the thread. </end minor hijack> Holy cow! Never noticed that before. I kept looking under options cuz that's the area where search is on the other forums I use. Thanks! And sorry for the topic hijack, guys. Share this post Link to post
hkhm Report post Posted August 18, 2009 What about Xanthe? Is it ZAN-thee like I've been saying or is the X more of an S or what? I ignore the "e" when I say it -- so it's one syllable and comes out more like "Zanth". --M i sort of exhale the 'e' sound. hard to explain, it's the same sort of sound i make for the name sethe. it's almost two syllables like "zan-th". Share this post Link to post
Mrs.Black Report post Posted September 16, 2009 Sorry, this is not really about pronunciation (although feel free to throw that in) – what does Schlafende Baigneuse mean? Share this post Link to post
Moryssa Report post Posted September 16, 2009 Sorry, this is not really about pronunciation (although feel free to throw that in) – what does Schlafende Baigneuse mean? According to one website's translation that I saw, it means "The Sleeping Bather". Most of the pages that I translated came up with "Sleeping", but weren't quite sure what "Baigneuse" was... this was the first that gave me more than "The Sleeping Baigneuse". --M Share this post Link to post
Aldercy Report post Posted September 16, 2009 Sorry, this is not really about pronunciation (although feel free to throw that in) – what does Schlafende Baigneuse mean? According to one website's translation that I saw, it means "The Sleeping Bather". Most of the pages that I translated came up with "Sleeping", but weren't quite sure what "Baigneuse" was... this was the first that gave me more than "The Sleeping Baigneuse". --M "Bather" actually sounds right for "baigneuse." I vaguely remember that "bain" is "bath" in French. Um... is "schlafende" German and "baigneuse" French (or a related Romance language)? o_O Share this post Link to post