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The pronunciation of "bury"
See, I pronounce it like "burry" and some people have told me in the past that it's supposed to be pronounced like "berry". What the heck? Why would you do that? Can't you see that that letter is a u and not an e?
Comments
That said, how do you pronounce Wednesday?
Wensday/Wendsday
Comftable
Comfterble
wensday
comfurtuhbol
offtun
And then you have Gloss-tur-shur vs. Glou-cess-tur-shire and such, which is mainly a way of hazing non-locals.
It's intuitive enough to understand. It's a lot easier to quickly say "Tuesday, Wensday, Thursday." than "Tuesday, WeDNesday, Thursday." The same thing happens with small numbers.
There are actually quite a few examples in English and other languages, of a word's spelling staying the same long after it stopped being representative of how it is pronounced.
I pronounce it "burry", which is the usual Northern English pronunciation, but you have to remember that someone from Yorkshire saying that sounds different to an American saying it anyway.
Standard British English, though, is "berry". That's how most people from London and the South would pronounce the word.
I also say Wednesday as "Wensday". Pronouncing all the syllables is something you would probably only get with someone speaking in a very formal, correct way, like a BBC announcer.
Bitch don't get me started on prescriptivism.
^ Oh, alright, "a very formal, "correct" way", if you prefer.
Bitches don't know about your anti-prescriptivism?
It's just that I'd like people in general to be more aware of how arbitrary notions of a standard use of language can be. Judgements of people based on their dialect/accent seem to me to be sort of like another form of bigotry that a lot more people are susceptible to since it's one that's less obvious.