How to pronounce ..........?
How do you pronounce Rosalyn?
I seen in the BtN database it says ROZ-a-lin
But does the ROZ have a long O or short O.
Example:
Would you pronounce it Rawz or Rose -a-lin?
Thanks :)
I seen in the BtN database it says ROZ-a-lin
But does the ROZ have a long O or short O.
Example:
Would you pronounce it Rawz or Rose -a-lin?
Thanks :)
Replies
I'd say with the O like in 'row'
I pronounce Rosalyn with the word "rose" in the front, because I am old enough to remember that that's how the First Lady Rosalyn Carter wants her name to be pronounced.
Rosalind, on the other hand, I pronounce as "Rahz", because that's how I've always heard the name of the actress Rosalind Russell pronounced. :)
Rosalind, on the other hand, I pronounce as "Rahz", because that's how I've always heard the name of the actress Rosalind Russell pronounced. :)
I say ROSE-ah-lynn.
I say Roz-lin, short o sound as in cross
best I can do, sorry!
best I can do, sorry!
I say "ROSE-uh-lin", like the flower rose + the sound you make when you can't think of anything to say + 'lin' like the name Lynn. Have I properly confused you?
I would say it with a short O.
I'd say RO-sa-lin O as in Rose
I say Raw-zah-lin {nt}
I'd say ROZ-a-lin with a short "o". For me RAWZ- sounds very different to ROZ-, the former sounds very American. The difference in sound is like that bewteen hawk and hockey. I'm not sure if that explanation works well, I'm no linguist. I don't like the sound of ROSE-a-lin at all.
I prefer Rosaline pronounced ROZ-a-line (not leen) to Rosalyn. Both are nice though.
I prefer Rosaline pronounced ROZ-a-line (not leen) to Rosalyn. Both are nice though.
I'd say ROZ-a-lin with a short "o". For me RAWZ- sounds very different to ROZ-, the former sounds very American. The difference in sound is like that bewteen hawk and hockey.
Unfortunately, the difference between those sounds is starting to disappear in Western American accents (and the trend is moving East, I think), according to an article someone posted on the Facts board a while ago. It's also the difference between Don and Dawn, and octopus and awkward (it annoys me so much when my roommates say AHK-ward, like octopus or hockey).
I personally pronounce it the same way you do, and thanks for explaining it a bit more clearly than I did. :)
Array
Unfortunately, the difference between those sounds is starting to disappear in Western American accents (and the trend is moving East, I think), according to an article someone posted on the Facts board a while ago. It's also the difference between Don and Dawn, and octopus and awkward (it annoys me so much when my roommates say AHK-ward, like octopus or hockey).
I personally pronounce it the same way you do, and thanks for explaining it a bit more clearly than I did. :)
Array
It is very difficult for someone who has grown up not making a distinction between the "ah" and "aw" sounds of Don and Dawn to even hear that when other people are trying hard to demonstrate it. The brain simply loses a lot of the ability to hear the difference between two close sounds when the difference is not meaningful in your own language or dialect.
How I try to explain it is:
AH is like the sound (Ahhhh!) one makes when one is very contented, such as settling into a warm bath.
AW is like the sound one makes when one feels sorry for someone else, or even better, when one is PRETENDING to feel sorry for someone else (AWWWW!!!)
Does that help you hear the difference??
How I try to explain it is:
AH is like the sound (Ahhhh!) one makes when one is very contented, such as settling into a warm bath.
AW is like the sound one makes when one feels sorry for someone else, or even better, when one is PRETENDING to feel sorry for someone else (AWWWW!!!)
Does that help you hear the difference??
I think I get it better now...
I think I get it better now. Kinda a difference in how far you open your mouth and throat? Very, very interesting.
Thanks to both of you!
I think I get it better now. Kinda a difference in how far you open your mouth and throat? Very, very interesting.
Thanks to both of you!
It is not dissimilar from the sound of the word "or". Trying saying "or"k-wud. Gosh, I'm pretty bad at explaining this. I'll try another method. How about the sound you use for the beginning of awful? Just say that and add the k-wud ending. AWK-wud.
No problem. I wasn't sure if I expressed myself well at all, but I'm glad it made sense to you. I like the difference between Don and Dawn, I'm going to stick with it.
Don v Dawn
Like Array said, that difference is disappearing. The Dawn sound is still more prevalent in New Jersey or New York, but even as east as Pennsylvania, where I am, we prn Dawn as Don.
Like Array said, that difference is disappearing. The Dawn sound is still more prevalent in New Jersey or New York, but even as east as Pennsylvania, where I am, we prn Dawn as Don.
The geographic distribution of the ah/aw merger is not a simple "east vs. west" one. Evidently the Pittsburgh area of Pennsylvania was one of the first places in the country to lose the distinction. The following map shows that most of the USA west of the Missouri has lost it, but so has western Pennsylvania, most of West Virginia, and northern New England. Most of my students in Omaha, which is on the eastern edge of Nebraska, still seem to make the distinction, but the western half of Nebraska has lost it, according to the map:
http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/maps/Map1.html
http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/maps/Map1.html
Ditto pronunciation.
I would have pronounced it Rose-a-lin, but that's just me. Somehow I think it's sounds prettier than the Rahz-a-lin pronunciation. I would have thought that's how most people would say it, but I personally don't like the 'oz' sound it makes.
I prn it Raws-a-lin when I first see it, but prefer Rose. The other day on tv, a character Rose-a-lin turned out to be spelled Rosalyn.
ditto.
Well, Rosalynn Carter pronounces her name Rose-a-lyn, so that's how I would tend to pronounce it. But I have heard it being said as Rahz-a-lyn too, so I guess it depends on who the name belongs to.
I say RAHZ-uh-lin, so that the first syllable is like Oz with an R in front of it.
I like it a lot, and I'm not sure why.
Array
I like it a lot, and I'm not sure why.
Array
That's how I say it too.
I like the name. I'd like Rosalee, except that I know a very overbearing woman so named, and that's what I think of.
I like the name. I'd like Rosalee, except that I know a very overbearing woman so named, and that's what I think of.
My first impulse is to pronounce it ROSE-a-lin, but I could probably be trained otherwise.