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#236596 09/01/06 05:55 PM
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HatMan Offline OP
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Just curious. It's probably not a word you say out loud too often, but how would you pronounce "WAFF"?

To answer this question (and satisfy my curiousity):

Step 1: Click here to hear a short sound file with two possible pronounciations.

EDIT (For a little extra clarity):
Option One rhymes with "daffy" and "taffy."
Option Two is like the first half of "waffle."

Step 2:Think about which one is closer to the way you'd say it.

Step 3: Vote in the poll below.

Thanks. smile

Paul


When in doubt, think about penguins. It probably won't help, but at least it'll be fun.
#236597 09/01/06 07:57 PM
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I think I may actually be somewhere in between, but will lean more towards the second option, meself. =D

Like saying waffles. laugh


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I vid, therefor I am.

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#236598 09/01/06 08:16 PM
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The sound is off on my computer since it's so late, but I say it like waffles. :p And I totally say it! If I'm reading a fic, I'll speak out loud sometimes when I'm thinking through my FDK.

Jen


"Meg...who let you back in the house?" -Family Guy
#236599 09/01/06 09:03 PM
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I voted other because... well, neither of the options are close to how I say it. laugh

I say it more way-fee. Am I the oddball out here? goofy

Sara smile


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#236600 09/01/06 11:31 PM
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Hack from Nowheresville
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Heh. Thanks for the audio sample, Paul. I'm one of the two who've gone for the first option so far. Funny, I never thought there were alternate (and apparently more popular!) pronunciations of the term.


Chris
"Superman is a guy who's seen wonders we'll never see and Lois is to him, one of those wonders."
#236601 09/01/06 11:35 PM
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Hack from Nowheresville
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I think, I tend to the second version.
Might be cause I in german, the "a" is always pronounced like in "waffle".
That's also the way I say "LAFF".

But tell me, Paul - whose voice had *that* been?
It made me shiver wink

Bye,

Jana


"Maybe I know what it's like, trying to find fulfillment in the wrong person. Trying to fit into the mold others expect of you."

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#236602 09/01/06 11:57 PM
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Incognito: I was as surprised as you were to discover that there was an "alternate" pronounciation, and I've been surprised by the vote so far, too.

Jana: Whose voice? Take a guess. wink

As for LAFF, I never considered pronouncing that in any way other than I'd say "laugh" (which also rhymes with option one).

Hmm. Now I'm wondering if I need to set up another poll... Waft vs waft . wink

(There are two red "speaker" icons on that page...)

Paul


When in doubt, think about penguins. It probably won't help, but at least it'll be fun.
#236603 09/02/06 01:25 AM
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Well, my speakers are disconnected, but I'd say I pronounce it closer to the second version (but not exactly) the way you wrote it.

Very interesting. I'd like to see a poll for the pronunciation of Lana Lang....


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#236604 09/02/06 02:10 AM
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I voted option two, I too like to say waffles... mmmm, waffles. drool

Ahem, anyway....

Nancy you are too funny. But it's a good thought. Is it Lana like banana? Or Lana with an awwww sound? - as in Lana like your lawn - a.

Hee hee. wink

In the story I just finished - whenever I said her name out loud as I wrote - it was Lana like lawn - a. But I've heard it Lana like banana before too. Hmmm...


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#236605 09/02/06 05:55 AM
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Quote
Originally posted by HatMan:
Jana: Whose voice? Take a guess. wink
Whoa, I thought so but didn't want to gush about that incredible voice when you might tell me afterwards it came from a PC or something wink

Quote
As for LAFF, I never considered pronouncing that in any way other than I'd say "laugh" (which also rhymes with option one).
See, it works the same for me - and my "laugh" has indeed the sound as in "waffle".

It might be interesting (yeah, I'm from the "Unimportant-but-interesting-Trivia front which I got recently to know in a fic by Annie M laugh ), whether there's a correlation between the way to pronounce these words and the origin of a person.
Cause in school we were strictly taught to pronounce "dance" and "can't" and so on with this "waffle"-a. (though not much of this Oxford English has survived in me wink )

Bye,

Jana


"Maybe I know what it's like, trying to find fulfillment in the wrong person. Trying to fit into the mold others expect of you."

"Looking for love" by DC Lady
#236606 09/02/06 06:44 AM
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I don't think I've ever actually said WAFF. I keep snakes, so to me "warm and fuzzy" tends to be something I've just thawed out for their dinner...


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#236607 09/02/06 07:50 AM
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I pronounce it like the second option, probably because I'm Dutch smile The first option sounds really weird to me because I've always thought of it like in waffle (yes, I do think about words.. :rolleyes: )


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#236608 09/02/06 08:12 AM
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Count me in as another who didn't realize there was any other option than that WAFF rhymes with laugh. Not that I ever said it out loud, to my knowledge, but that's the way I say it in my mind.

On the other hand, after hearing the sound file (btw, I agree with Jana - nice voice, Paul) - I have to admit that the word WAFFY pronounced to rhyme with taffy sounds like it wacky and brings to mind a corn-ball comedy, where as WAFFY pronounced to rhyme with waffle -le +y, sounds sort of warm and fuzzy! Hmmm, I may have to change the way I pronounce the word. goofy


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#236609 09/02/06 08:46 AM
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It never even occured to me to pronouced it the option two way. I always did option one.


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#236610 09/02/06 10:04 AM
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I say it like the first option...

When I don't know how to say words (and I can't find sound bites for them on the internet!), I pronounce them as if they were French. When I was in Nashville last year, visiting friends I made on another website, they kept cracking up because I always mis-pronounced their nicks - they all sounded French and funny to them. wink (like "dido", which I say "deedo" since "i" is "ee" in French... eh... never occured to me that I was wrong. LOL)


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#236611 09/02/06 10:43 AM
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LOL, Paul! I agree with the others - very nice voice, and I think you should consider a career in radio.

For the record, I rhyme WAFF with laugh - and that's a northern, short 'a', not a southern, drawn-out 'a'. For further clarification, northerners pronounce their a's like...um...possibly Sean Connery, whereas southerns pronounce their a's like the royal family.

Yvonne

#236612 09/02/06 11:32 AM
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Quote
I pronounce it like the second option, probably because I'm Dutch
I pronounce it as option number too as well, but it has nothing to do with the fact I'm Dutch. wink I know this is a word that can be pronounced in several ways and this just sounds better to me, more English in a way.

And nice voice, Paul! smile

Saskia


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#236613 09/02/06 11:42 AM
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You English-speakers and your one thousand different ways of pronouncing 'a'... razz

It took me at least two listenings to figure out exactly what was different between the two options. I could hear they were slightly different, now that they were given as examples and I was *waiting* for the difference, but if I had heard the two options spoken by two different people in an everyday conversation, I probably wouldn't have noticed. But I guess having grown up learning Greek, where there's only one, very clear way of pronouncing 'a', I haven't been trained to tell apart easily these subtle differences.

Or maybe you guys are just very nitpicky [Linked Image]

As for how I pronounce it... I'm confused. I thought I said the first - well, in my head, I thought the first, with a very clear, very Greek 'a'. (Think Spanish 'a'.) But when I tried to *say* it, it came out more like the second option - or, well, less like the first option; not so clearly 'a'. (Haven't voted yet.)

And Paul - you sound nothing like I thought you would. I never imagined you had such a deep voice. (It's great, though smile Charming, even, if you'll allow me.)

See ya,
AnnaBtG.


What we've got here is failure to communicate...
#236614 09/02/06 12:20 PM
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Well, let's see DJ, my best friend's name is Lana like banana. But on Smallville Lana is pronounced Lawna.


Interesting note, Schnuffichen - You are unlikely to hear Americans saying dance and can't with a waffle a. That would make it sound very British to me.


Okay, now wait a minute, Vicki:

Quote
Count me in as another who didn't realize there was any other option than that WAFF rhymes with laugh. Not that I ever said it out loud, to my knowledge, but that's the way I say it in my mind.

On the other hand, after hearing the sound file (btw, I agree with Jana - nice voice, Paul) - I have to admit that the word WAFFY pronounced to rhyme with taffy sounds like it wacky and brings to mind a corn-ball comedy, where as WAFFY pronounced to rhyme with waffle -le +y, sounds sort of warm and fuzzy! Hmmm, I may have to change the way I pronounce the word.
So, you are saying you pronounce WAFF like laugh but laugh doesn't rhyme with taff as in taffy? If I were to say laugh-y it would rhyme with taffy. So how do you say laugh? Do you say laugh as in the lof part of loft? I voted, but I didn't listen to Paul. So what accent do you speak with Paul? Now it makes me wonder how some of you say waffle. I might have to hook up my speakers....

I thought I liked what Anna said about the Spanish 'a', which is how I would say it, but she didn't describe a Spanish 'a' the way I say a Spanish 'a' and I thought it was always the same. Anna described saying a Spanish 'a' the first way Paul described which is taffy, but I say waffle the same way I say a Spanish 'a'.


So now do any of us actually know how we think the other folks here pronounce WAFF? I don't think those little marks that tell us how to pronounce the different types of 'a' sounds would help since we all seem to be saying it different anyway. What a hoot.... rotflol


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#236615 09/02/06 12:41 PM
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PS, I finally listened to the sound clip today, Paul. You totally belong in radio. :p

Jen


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