In the US I've only every heard ker-RIN. (m)
in reply to a message by Fictionfan8618
Replies
Same. The only ones I've met have pronounced it ker-RIN.
KOR-in
I'm from the US, and I've only heard it pronounced KOR-in. It sounds like the word core with an 'n' added.
I had a teacher with this name.
I'm from the US, and I've only heard it pronounced KOR-in. It sounds like the word core with an 'n' added.
I had a teacher with this name.
Same
Both in Australia where I grew up (I went through 8 years of schooling with a Corinne and have known at least 4 other Corinnes of various ages) and in the US, where I currently live.
Both in Australia where I grew up (I went through 8 years of schooling with a Corinne and have known at least 4 other Corinnes of various ages) and in the US, where I currently live.
That reminds me. My college roommate was named Zoe. At the time she was born, 1960, that was a very unusual name, and it still was when we were roommates in 1978. It seemed as if her parents were quite determined to use unusual names. Her brother's name was Reed, an unusual name to give in the early 1960s, when he was born. And then there was her sister, Karen. Not so unusual you say? Well, it wouldn't have been if the pronunciation were not KOR-in, just as you've described. I always thought that to insist on pronouncing Karen KOR-in was so weird.
The posters who have commented on the pronunciation are probably not from the US. I’m not.
I'm in the US and keh-RIN is weird to me too.
What's the "e" for if you're going to pronounce it keh-RIN?
What's the "e" for if you're going to pronounce it keh-RIN?
I'm American, and I say keh-RIN. I can't say much about how other Americans say it, because I can't recall hearing anyone say it. But that's the intuitive pronunciation to me.
Sorry I meant ker-RIN, not KER-in. I edited my message to reflect this.