T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
302.1 | And vase vs. vaaz | VAXRT::CANNOY | Souls merge when the time is right. | Mon Jan 12 1987 13:00 | 8 |
| Well, I grew up in rural Pennsylvania and all my relatives always
pronounced it, "Ant". When I was a kid, I always thought people who
pronounced "aunt" as "AH-nt" and "vase" as "vaaz" (sorry, my terminal
doesn't do all those funny characters) instead of "vase" with a long
"a", were stuck up and pretentious. It still sounds strange, but
I know what they are saying now.
Tamzen
|
302.2 | As long as it's not "Awnt" | FOREST::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Mon Jan 12 1987 13:34 | 4 |
| I've never had a problem with "Ahnt" (or "Ont", if you will.) "Ant"
definitely sounds wrong, and "Awnt" really sounds pretentious.
Larry-who grew-up-in-New-York-City
|
302.3 | "Ant" to me | CHUCKM::MURRAY | Chuck Murray | Mon Jan 12 1987 16:17 | 4 |
| I've always pronounced it "ant." I grew up bouncing all over the
U.S. and some other parts of the world (my father was a career
Air Force officer), but spent most of my youth in the South and
in Ohio.
|
302.4 | I shouldn't admit this, but... | DECWET::MITCHELL | | Mon Jan 12 1987 16:38 | 9 |
| I pronounce "aunt" as "ant," although I believe "ont" to be the correct
way to say it.
As fore "vase," spelling dictates that it should be pronounced to rhyme
with "base." My rule is that if it cost more than $100.00, it is a "vahs."
:-)
John M.
|
302.5 | "Aint" misbehavin' | TSG::GREENE | Allison Greene | Mon Jan 12 1987 16:42 | 4 |
| My husband, who is from North Carolina, says "aint". I was born and
raised in N.J. and I've always said "ant".
-Allison
|
302.6 | Depends on where... | MODEL::YARBROUGH | | Tue Jan 13 1987 09:33 | 2 |
| Most Bostonians who say "ahnt" are pronouncing "aren't", as in "Cahs ahnt
allowed to pahk in Hahvid yahd."
|
302.7 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Tue Jan 13 1987 10:16 | 5 |
| I use "ant." Depends where you come from. I pronounce _canis
familiaris_ "dog" to rhyme with "log"; many pronounce it "dawg."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
302.8 | | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Jan 13 1987 15:24 | 17 |
| re .7:
>> I pronounce _canis familiaris_ "dog" to rhyme with "log";
>> many pronounce it "dawg."
but 'dawg' does rhyme with "log", i.e. I pronounce it 'lawg'.
It's the pronounciation of the vowels that determines accents, or
so I hear.
I'm from the east coast (Florida, Long Island, Mass., New Jersey)
/
( ___
) ///
/
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302.9 | I have one of each | HEADS::OSBORN | Sally's VAXNotes Vanity Plate | Tue Jan 13 1987 16:49 | 5 |
| My mother is a Connecticut Yankee; her NYC sister is my friendly
aunt, pronounced 'Ant Penny'.
My father is an Ohio German; his Cleveland sister is my snobbish
aunt, pronounced 'Ahnt Barbara'.
|
302.10 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | A disgrace to the forces of evil | Thu Jan 15 1987 07:01 | 5 |
| I was always amused by the fact that Spider-Man had an A(u)nt May.
(Actually, I always pronounced it "ahnt".)
--- jerry
|
302.11 | Speling? | ECLAIR::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Thu Jan 15 1987 07:33 | 12 |
| Re: .4
> As fore "vase," spelling dictates that it should be pronounced to rhyme
> with "base."
Oh yeah? How about through, rough, ought, bough, cough? When did
spelling have anything to do with pronunciation? :-)
I say "Ahnt" and "Vahz", but then I'm from Southern England.
Jeff.
|
302.12 | Ahnt Glottis? | CHEV02::NESMITH | See Spot run. Run Spot, run. | Thu Jan 15 1987 12:20 | 9 |
| In Midwestern, unaccented English :^), it's ant. Any attempt to
pronounce it ahnt would end if you had an Aunt Gladys.
As for vase, I read somewhere that vahze is the proper pronunciation
but, to lessen the snob factor, vaze was acceptable and better than vase.
Born and raised in the Heartland...
Susan
|
302.13 | How Now Brown... | NY1MM::BOWERS | Dave Bowers | Thu Jan 15 1987 16:58 | 5 |
| Midwestern English unaccented???
My Iowa cousins pronounce the name of the capital of Spain with
the accent on the first syllable and my mother's name (Doris) as
though it were spelled Dorse (rhymes with equus).
|
302.14 | Mame was an ANT | SAHQ::LILLY | | Tue Feb 03 1987 11:09 | 2 |
| If "ANT BEE" was good enough for sheriff Andy Taylor, then its good
enough for me. TV made me what I am today.
|
302.15 | Entomological etymology | DECWET::MITCHELL | | Tue Feb 03 1987 14:55 | 12 |
| RE: .14
Let's see...
If a bee wolf is a wasp
and
If an ant bear is a doodle bug
then
What is an ant bee?
John M.
|
302.16 | | DECWET::SHUSTER | Writers on the storm... | Tue Feb 03 1987 15:56 | 2 |
| An ant be an ant. That's what an ant be.
|
302.17 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Tue Feb 03 1987 17:51 | 7 |
| Re .15:
A humbug. [With thanks to Booker T. Washington, who first made
a similar reply.]
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
302.18 | Sibilant | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Wed Feb 04 1987 06:58 | 1 |
| My Aunt Sybil lisps a lot.
|
302.19 | | XANADU::RAVAN | To light a candle's to cast a shadow... | Wed Feb 04 1987 09:42 | 5 |
| Re .14:
But the Mayberry folks didn't say "ANT" Bee, they said "AINT" Bee...
-b (who ain't an ant or an aunt)
|
302.20 | You caint say aint to your ant | VAXWRK::CONNOR | | Wed Feb 11 1987 15:43 | 7 |
| I can remember when we first moved to N.E. and the kids teachers
insisting that aunt is pronounced ahnt. I looked it up in the American
Heritage dictionary and from it determined that both ahnt and ant
are correct but that ant is preferred. Just the way I was raised
in southern NY.
According to the same dictionary for vase, the preferred order
is VAS, VAZ, and lastly VAHZ.
|
302.21 | Geographic nit | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Thu Feb 26 1987 13:06 | 9 |
| Re:< Note 302.20 by VAXWRK::CONNOR >
>> in southern NY.
Is that Southern Southern NY - Westchester, NYC, and Long Island -
or Northern Southern NY - the area through which Route 17 runs
(also known as "the Southern Tier")?
Bruce (former guylander)
|
302.22 | I are one | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Feb 26 1987 17:10 | 5 |
| My brother's children have one aunt from each side of their
family -- but we are both named "Ann". So I am "Ahnt Ann"
and their mother's sister, who is from west of the Hudson,
is "Ant Ann".
Ann B.
|
302.23 | Vast Difference? | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Fri Feb 27 1987 13:10 | 4 |
| .20> According to the same dictionary for vase, the preferred order
.20> is VAS, VAZ, and lastly VAHZ.
Does that mean we all have to show DEFERENS to your VAS ??? :^)
|
302.24 | my o's are closed | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Mar 31 1987 17:51 | 17 |
| Several replies to this topic have touched on variations of the
same problem: the vowel sounds in words such as Ant, Ahnt, and Aont
(or dog and dawg).
When I took linguistics in college, I was taught that the major
dialectical distinction in this country revolves around the fact
that most residents of the northern plains and western mountains
don't have the vowel sound that I've represented as "Aont" in their
phonetic repertoire. (The same way most Americans can't handle the
German "Ach") Linguists who care about such things call this sound
the "Open O", as I recall; it's halfway between the short-a sound
and the short (closed) o sound.
I can't illustrate it for you -- I'm from Montana and my o's are
closed.
--bonnie
|