When my sisters and I were kids and we first learned of the “zed” pronunciation from a Canadian relative, we started singing the ABC song like this:
“. . . W, X, Y, and Zed.
Now I know my A-Bed-Ced,
Next time won’t you sing with med!”
In turn, that led (;)) to the idea that all of the letters of the alphabet should should end with “-ed,” because then the first few letters could be pronounced like this:
Rex had the right idea. Without going so far as to use the phonetic alphabet, in which case Z would be “Zulu”, pronouncing it as “zed” makes it distinctly recognizable where it might otherwise be misinterpreted as C in radio or telephone communication. Plus, “zee” sounds silly.
BwanaBob, the people who are ascribing it to Sesame Street are not from the USA. That’s kind of important.
Rex:
I spent three years in a job here in Ireland where I had to constantly spell things out over the phone and “zed” is the one different pronunciation I just could not bring myself to say. I grew to say “haitch”, “or” and even sometimes to pronounce the number 3 as “tree” but I simply cannot say “zed”. I don’t know why.
I have a related question about w. In the movie A Fish Called Wanda, an English character uses the sound “whhh” or “whhir” for the letter w. She says “a whhh for Wendy” instead of saying “a double-u for Wendy” as I would say. Is this a standard British pronounciation?
As someone mentioned above, it is common as a child to learn the alphabet phonetically. An adult using such sounds is either being playful or is supposed to look simple.
One interesting one, though is the letter “k”. The letters “c” and “k” are pronounced “kuh” phonetically, so the letter “k” becomes “kicking kuh” or “curly kuh”, depending on where you were taught.
I think that because English started in UK before America was even colonised by europeans “Zed” is obviously the original and correct pronounciation and the americans are obviously just being silly. It’s the same with your tomatoes and the way you have to say “sidewalk” instead of “pavement”, and “trunk” instead of “boot”. I mean everyone knoews a trunk is what an elephant uses to blow it’s snot out.
I’m not aware that anyone was making any such drastic and sweeping claim; certainly ‘zee’ is not the UK-normal pronunciation and may perhaps even be described as ‘wrong’ in this fair land, but of course that doesn’t make it the correct name everywhere, ‘zee’ is normal in the USA and therefore ‘zed’ is just as wrong there.
Just like the Alumin(i)um thing - ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ are words bandied about by people who don’t understand the issue.
That’s illogical and I’m sure it’s not correct. “Kicking kuh” means “k” alright but “curly cuh” refers to the “c”, and the two expressions are used to enable children to tell one from another. The word kicking obvously begins with a k, and it looks as though it’s kicking; a c is a curly shape and begins that word.
That has been asked several times, such as in this thread.
Maybe you are right, I am 29 so it has been a wee while since I learnt the alphabet! Then again, the way I was taught to write “k” was quite curly, with the upper diagonal actually being a round bit (somewhat like an “R” but squashed and with the leftmost perpendicular a bit longer than the rest).
The principle in my school had obviously never heard of this group because during an assembly that is how he referred to them (something about the dangers of rock and roll). Hilarity ensued.