Laurel or Yanny

Answer: Too muffled to make out.

I’m impressed; this is one of the most balanced polls IMHO has ever had. You would have a hard time creating any other poll in which you could come out with a roughly 50%-50% result.

Laurel. It would be interesting to have a poll broken down by age.

Laurel.
And this is clearly blue and black. Google Search

After listening to the version that clearly says Yanny that’s all I can hear now. It’s the weirdest thing. I can’t hear laurel anymore even though that’s all I heard the first 5 times I played it. Very bizarre.

After hearing Laurel in the original. All the others now sound like Laurel. Is this some clever hoax or is it a power of suggestion?

Laurel the first few times, then with the base lowered I got Yanny, but it was faint, tryed again with that and just Got Laurel. Several more attempts one more Yanny, everything else is Laurel.

Evidently some people have taken offense to the US Air Force making a joke about Yanny and Laurel.

Oh, ha ha! I bet you would rather have heard yanny or laurel than die because we killed you!

:mad::mad: Of course, this is not the first time that has happened.

lol. I’m still seeing white and gold.

At first, all I heard was Yanni…now all I hear is Laurel.

Sounds like “yairy” to me, maybe with the “r” blending a bit into a “w” sound, as if the speaker had rhotacism, like Elmer Fudd or Barry from The Big Bang Theory. If I play with one of those tools designed to let you hear one or the other, at the low frequency end it sounds like “Laurel,” but at the high frequency end it still sounds like “yairy.” How anyone hears an “n” sound in there is beyond me.

I played this to the guys at work tonight. 3 Laurels, 2 Yammis. It was anarchy.

The answer is laurel, I can easily hear both, and I find that it is insanely difficult to hear the other if one of the words is written in front of me at the time. The power of suggestion in all of this is amazing.

ISTM that the sound has been manipulated after being recorded. I doubt if anyone would have heard yanni if they heard the guy actually saying it.

FWIW, I myself hear Yanni but not rhyming with “Manny”. To me, the first syllable is a “yeah” sound. So it’s more like “yeanny”.

Actually, he hears covfefe. :slight_smile:

Laurel. But when it’s downpitched 30% I hear Yammy (not Yanni) . I think it’s definitely tied to pitch, and everybody’s ears are differently attenuated to it. It’s why teenagers can have ringers the teachers can’t hear.

Another vote for Yammy with an “M”. I messed around with sound settings and could not hear anything but that.

This is what I hear, too. No “n” or “m” sound.

Exactly. There are dresses that are white and gold and dresses that are blue and black. But yanny isn’t a word. And the single example given of a use of yanny isn’t.

So someone found a recording of an actual word that sounded weird to them and spread it around.

And this was either happenstance, or took a good deal of effort, because laurel isn’t a common word.

I swear, in Landslide, Stevie Nicks sings “Brung it down”.

I’ve yet to persuade the populous.