Our neck of the woods, as far as I know, its Or A Gun.
Uranus is up to the pronouncer and the situation
For dumb ass people, its YOUR AaaNUS
and otherwise…ya know…
Our neck of the woods, as far as I know, its Or A Gun.
Uranus is up to the pronouncer and the situation
For dumb ass people, its YOUR AaaNUS
and otherwise…ya know…
:smack:
What difference are you trying to indicate between or-a-gun and ore-a-gun? Based on just that, I’d pronounce those two exactly the same.
Pronounce it anyway you want, just do it in private.
That’s what it’s always been for me. I know I don’t count because I’m Californian, but I have relatives in Oregon.
That sounds like a reasonable explanation. It beats the idea that they’re copying that old song with the state puns (Where has Orry gone, boys? Where has Orry gone? If you want Alaska, Alaska where she’s gone. She gone to pay her Texas . . . ).
First example is pronounced quickly, the second one is much more drawn out. Maybe “oar” is a better phrasing then “ore”.
The mispronunciation I hear fairly often is “wes-CON-sin” – and sometimes even something close to “WEST-con-sin.” (And, yes, with the nasal Upper Midwest accent, a native pronounces it something like “wis-CAHN-sin.”)
Even more egregious, during telecasts of Packer games, is when an announcer says both “wes-CON-sin” and “GREENbay” (as one word).
If Oregon, WI were a city, or even a big or well-known town, I might buy that as the reason why. But, it’s only about 10,000 people – it’s just outside of Madison, though I don’t know if it’s close enough to be considered a suburb or not – and it’s not particularly famous for anything. I’d wager that most Midwesterners haven’t even heard of it.
Hmm, that doesn’t really help me understand - “oar” and “ore” are pronounced exactly the same for me, as is “or.”
Are you from the part of the country where an earl is the thing people used to put on the house to get TV reception?
I grew up in that part of the country where it was that black, icky stuff pumped from the ground.
Jeezus fucking Christ …
JEFF’ - er - son’
The “O” carries the /j/ sound and it’s the G that carries the /s/ sound … can’t you folks pronounce simple Englishing? …
I’m married to a 7th generation Oregonian with a strong native Oregonian accent. She says “Óryg’n.”
Woody Simmons (1976), “Oregon Mountains”: Oregon Mountains - YouTube
Black Hawk County (1974), “Oregon (I Can’t Go Home)”: Oregon (I Can't Go Home) - YouTube
My wife also says, “Tell people not to mispronounce our fucking road names, either. Or ‘Willamette.’”