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|  Message 142,897 of 144,799  |
|  William Vetter to mumble  |
|  Re: What you may not hear Re: Giving Cha  |
|  17 May 14 11:04:59  |
 From: mdhangton@gmail.com On Saturday, May 17, 2014 6:15:23 AM UTC-4, mumble wrote: > On 05/16/2014 11:58 PM, J.Pascal wrote: > > > On Friday, May 16, 2014 11:13:06 PM UTC-6, William Vetter wrote: > > >> People who have not had formal education, but have learned primarily from books, even though they may have learned more than many people who have completed degrees, can teach themselves to pronounce unfamiliar words as they are written. > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> One afternoon, I was talking to a laboratory stockman at his counter. He was excited because he had bought a new telescope, and wanted to use the setting circles to find the Ring Nebula and so forth, and he was telling me about sidereal time. He pronounced it "SIDE REAL." > > > > > > > > > Er.... > > > > > > Honest, I don't think I've ever heard that word spoken. > > > > > > -Julie > > > > > > > Back in olden times they had these devices called "dictionaries" that > > contained information on pronunciation in addition to specific meanings, > > and some few were taught to look up the words they encountered which > > were new to their personal vocabularies. I think that I might still > > have a hardcopy dictionary around somewhere, covered in dust; new words > > seem to be added to the consensus vocabulary faster than dictionaries > > are published, and one is not always online when reading; so it goes. He needs a reason to suspect that he pronounces side-real wrong, before he tries to look it up. --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) |
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