How do you pronounce Monticello?

This sounds familiar.

I was under the impression that Jefferson’s home was historically pronounced Monte-sello? I mean, I thought that’s how he called it? I could be wrong though. I forget where I heard that.

That’s where you’re confused. We’re speaking English, not Italian.

How Italians pronounce it is interesting, but irrelevant to how you pronounce it in English.

Nope.

Jefferson’s birthplace is pronounced shad-well.

Same with the town in Utah. They’re very picky about it there.

But I would imagine someone of Jefferson’s erudition would have named it for the Italian place and pronounced it the same.

I bet you’re one of those brushetta people too. :wink:

As in the musical instrument, CH;

I have toured Monticello 2 times in my life and the guides refered to it as what is on the link.

There is an 1826 copy of the Declaration hanging inside, spectacular to view.

It was really a thrill to tour is home.

He is buried on the grounds, which makes 18 Presidential gravesites I have visited on my travels.

James Monroe’s Ashlawn-Highland is about 2 miles away, toured that too.

We have a Monticello in Kentucky and it’s -sello. I pronounce Jefferson’s home -chello.

Same. Jefferson’s home is -chello, the city in New York is -sello.

-chello. I probably vacillate between monteh- and montay-, depending on how fast I’m talking.

I grew up in Indiana. The town there is pronounced monti-selo. I tend to use local pronounciation for places though. TJ’s home is -chelo.

I say Montisello, because there’s a town in my home state called Monticello that’s pronounced Montisello. Even though I think it SHOULD be pronounced Montichello, that’s not how the locals do it.

Same with “Kay-ro”, “No-dur Daym”, and “Dess Plains” instead of “Kye-ro”, “No-truh Dahm”, and “De Plain” (or however the French pronounce it).

My father is a retired Jefferson scholar and he says Monti-chello. I also have family near Monti-sello, NY. I win.

Probably thinking of the same town and state. Always sounds to me like the locals are saying Mont-ah-sello.

Montichello.

I have what, from googling, seems to be a false memory of an alcoholic drink called Monticello. Does anyone know of a drink with a similar name that I’m getting mixed up?

Yes, but we pronounce cello as chello, not sello. Borrowed words often retain some features of their original language’s pronunciation.

Same here…Monti-sello NY, Monti-chello Jefferson’s home…

I’m staying with family in Monticello, Georgia right now :slight_smile:

I voted “sello”, since I’m obviously more familiar with this town and I wouldn’t have thought to pronounce it any other way. But now I know thats wrong!

Me too. Limoncello, probably.

Not to be confused with Oranjello’s brother Lemonjello.

Ah, that must be it - TY.